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ENGLISH PROSE

PROSE MID TERM EXAMINATION

(CROSSWORD & WORD SEARCH)

By:

HANA KAPILA NATANIA


NIM: 11170260000044
5B

Program Studi Sastra Inggris


Fakultas Adab Dan Humaniora
Universitas Islam Negeri Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta
2019
PROSE CROSSWORD AND PROSE WORD SEARCH

(Source: Kuiper, Kathleen. PROSE LITERARY TERMS AND CONCEPTS. New York:
Britannica Educational Publishing. 2012.)

THE CONTENTS

1. Quote: “An invented prose narrative of considerable length and a certain complexity that
deals imaginatively with human experience, usually through a connected sequence of
events involving a group of persons in a specific setting, is called a Novel.” (Kuiper,
2012: 1)
Question: What is the term that refers to an invented prose narrative of considerable
length and a certain complexity that deals imaginatively with human experience, usually
through a connected sequence of events involving a group of persons in a specific
setting?
Answer: NOVEL

2. Quote: “The novel is propelled through its hundred or thousand pages by a device known
as the story or plot.” (Kuiper, 2012: 4)
Question: What is the literary term that refers to the device of hundred or thousand pages
that propelled a novel?
Answer: PLOT
3. Quote: “A biographical novel that deals with the period of a young person’s social and
moral initiation into adulthood is called an apprenticeship.” (Kuiper, 2012: 29)
Question: What is the literary term that refers to biographical novel that deals with the
period of a young person’s social and moral initiation into adulthood?
Answer: APPRENTICESHIP
4. Quote: “Bildungsroman is a class of novel that deals with the maturation process, with
how and why the protagonist develops, both morally and psychologically.” (Kuiper,
2012: 29)
Question: What is the class of novel that deals with the maturation process, with how and
why the protagonist develops, both morally and psychologically?
Answer: BILDUNGSROMAN

5. Quote: “Dime novels were a type of inexpensive, usually paperback, melodramatic novel
of adventure popular in the United States roughly between 1860 and 1915.” (Kuiper,
2012: 30)
Question: What is the type of novels that were inexpensive, usually paperback,
melodramatic novel of adventure popular in the United States roughly between 1860 and
1915?
Answer: DIME

6. Quote: “When a novel is told through the medium of letters written by one or more of
the characters, it is termed an epistolary novel.” (Kuiper, 2012: 31)
Question: What is the term of a kind of novel that told through the medium of letters
written by one or more of the characters?
Answer: EPISTOLARY

7. Quote: “The Gothic novel is a form of European Romantic, pseudomedieval fiction


having a prevailing atmosphere of mystery and terror.” (Kuiper, 2012: 32)
Question: What is the term for work of fiction that have a form of European Romantic,
pseudomedieval fiction having a prevailing atmosphere of mystery and terror?
Answer: GOTHIC

8. Quote: “Any novel that has as its setting a period of history and that attempts to convey
the spirit, manners, and social conditions of a past age with realistic detail and fidelity
(which is in some cases only apparent fidelity) to historical fact is considered to be a
historical novel.” (Kuiper, 2012: 33)
Question: What is the genre of a novel that has its setting a period of history and that
attempts to convey the spirit, manners, and social conditions of a past age with realistic
detail and fidelity (which is in some cases only apparent fidelity) to historical fact?
Answer: HISTORICAL

9. Quote: “The psychological novel is a work of fiction in which the thoughts, feelings, and
motivations of the characters are of equal or greater interest than is the external action of
the narrative.” (Kuiper, 2012: 38)
Question: What is the name of work of fiction in which the thoughts, feelings, and
motivations of the characters are of equal or greater interest than is the external action of
the narrative?
Answer: PSYCHOLOGICAL

10. Quote: “Western is a genre of storytelling (novels, short stories, motion pictures, and
television and radio shows) set in the American West, usually in the period from the
1850s to the end of the 19th century.” (Kuiper, 2012: 41)
Question: What is the name of a genre in storytelling (novels, short stories, motion
pictures, and television and radio shows) that set in the American West, usually in the
period from the 1850s to the end of the 19th century?
Answer: WESTERN

11. Quote: “The imaginative fiction that is dependent for effect on strangeness of setting
(such as other worlds or times) and of characters (such as supernatural or unnatural
beings) is called fantasy (and sometimes spelled phantasy).” (Kuiper, 2012: 66)
Question: What is the term for the imaginative fiction that is dependent for effect on
strangeness of setting (such as other worlds or times) and of characters (such as
supernatural or unnatural beings)?
Answer: FANTASY
12. Quote: “The fable is usually a tale about animals who are personified and behave as
though they were humans” (Kuiper, 2012: 71)
Question: What is the literary term for the work of fiction that usually contains a tale
about animals who are personified and behave as though they were humans?
Answer: FABLE

13. Quote: “The bestiary is a literary genre of the European Middle Ages consisting of a
collection of stories, each based on a description of certain qualities of an animal, plant,
or inanimate object (such as a stone).” (Kuiper, 2012: 90)
Question: What is a literary genre of the European Middle Ages consisting of a collection
of stories, each based on a description of certain qualities of an animal, plant, or
inanimate object (such as a stone)?
Answer: BESTIARY

14. Quote: “The emblem book is a collection of symbolic pictures, usually accompanied by
mottoes and expositions in verse and often also by a prose commentary.” (Kuiper, 2012:
93)
Question: What is the book that is a collection of symbolic pictures, usually accompanied
by mottoes and expositions in verse and often also by a prose commentary?
Answer: EMBLEM

15. Quote: “An exemplum (plural exempla) is a short tale originally incorporated by a
medieval preacher into his sermon to emphasize a moral or illustrate a point of doctrine.”
(Kuiper, 2012: 94)
Question: What is the literary term for a short tale originally incorporated by a medieval
preacher into his sermon to emphasize a moral or illustrate a point of doctrine?
Answer: EXEMPLUM
16. Quote: “A medieval tale of adventure told in alternating sections of sung verse and
recited prose is called a chantefable.” (Kuiper, 2012: 115)
Question: What is the term that refers to a kind of literary work containing a medieval
tale of adventure told in alternating sections of sung verse and recited prose?
Answer: CHANTEFABLE

17. Quote: “The Old Norse term fornaldarsars˛ogur means “sagas of antiquity,” and it refers
to a class of Icelandic sagas dealing with the ancient myths and hero legends of
Germania, with the adventures of Vikings, or with other exotic adventures in foreign
lands.” (Kuiper, 2012: 127)
Question: What is the term which means “sagas of antiquity,” and it refers to a class of
Icelandic sagas dealing with the ancient myths and hero legends of Germania, with the
adventures of Vikings, or with other exotic adventures in foreign lands?
Answer: FORNALDARSARS

18. Quote: “Broadly, the term hero refers to the main male character in a literary work, but it
is also used in a specialized sense for any figure celebrated in the ancient legends of a
people or in such early heroic epics as Gilgamesh, the Iliad, Beowulf, or La Chanson de
Roland.” (Kuiper, 2012: 127)
Question: What is the term that refers to the main male character in a literary work, but it
is also used in a specialized sense for any figure celebrated in the ancient legends of a
people or in such early heroic epics as Gilgamesh, the Iliad, Beowulf, or La Chanson de
Roland?
Answer: HERO

19. Quote: “A conte is a short tale, often recounting an adventure” (Kuiper, 2012: 154)
Question: What is a the term for a short tale that is often recounting an adventure?
Answer: CONTE
20. Quote: “The type of popular literature in which a crime is introduced and investigated
and the culprit is revealed is called a detective story.” (Kuiper, 2012: 154)
Question: What is the term of story which is the type of popular literature in which a
crime is introduced and investigated and the culprit?
Answer: DETECTIVE

21. Quote: “The dilemma tale, also called a judgment tale, is an African form of short story
whose ending is either open to conjecture or is morally ambiguous, thus allowing the
audience to comment or speculate upon the correct solution to the problem
posed in the tale.” (Kuiper, 2012: 157)
Question: What is the term of the kind of tale that refers to an African form of short story
whose ending is either open to conjecture or is morally ambiguous, thus allowing the
audience to comment or speculate upon the correct solution to the problem
posed in the tale?
Answer: DILEMMA

22. Quote: : “The maqāmah (an Arabic word meaning “assembly”) is an Arabic literary
genre in which entertaining anecdotes, often about rogues, mountebanks, and beggars,
written in an elegant, rhymed prose (saj‘), are presented in a dramatic or narrative context
most suitable for the display of the author’s eloquence, wit, and erudition.” (Kuiper,
2012: 161)
Question: What is the literary term for a literary genre in Arabic which entertaining
anecdotes, often about rogues, mountebanks, and beggars, written in an elegant, rhymed
prose (saj‘), are presented in a dramatic or narrative context most suitable for the display
of the author’s eloquence, wit, and erudition?
Answer: MAQAMAH

23. Quote: “Satire is a chiefly literary and dramatic artistic form, in which human or
individual vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings are held up to censure by means of
ridicule, derision, burlesque, irony, parody, caricature, or other methods, sometimes with
an intent to inspire social reform.” (Kuiper, 2012: 164)
Question: What is the name of literary and dramatic form , in which human or individual
vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings are held up to censure by means of ridicule,
derision, burlesque, irony, parody, caricature, or other methods, sometimes with an intent
to inspire social reform?
Answer: SATIRE

24. Quote: “A pasquinade is a brief and generally anonymous satirical comment in prose or
verse that ridicules a contemporary leader or national event.” (Kuiper, 2012: 178)
Question: What is the literary term that refers to a brief and generally anonymous satirical
comment in prose or verse that ridicules a contemporary leader or national event?
Answer: PASQUINADE

25. Quote: “Narratology is the study of narrative structure, narratology looks at what
narratives have in common and what makes one different from another.” (Kuiper, 2012:
228)
Question: What is the study that tells about the structure of narrative which looks at what
narratives have in common and what makes one different from another?
Answer: NARRATOLOGY
PROSE CROSSWORD

(Source: Kuiper, Kathleen. PROSE LITERARY TERMS AND CONCEPTS. New York:
Britannica Educational Publishing. 2012.)

DIRECTION: Use the clues below to fill in the crossword with the correct words.

ACROSS:

2. What is the term of story which is the type of popular literature in which a crime is
introduced and investigated and the culprit?
6. What is the literary term that refers to the device of hundred or thousand pages that
propelled a novel?
8. What is the study that tells about the structure of narrative which looks at what narratives
have in common and what makes one different from another?
10. What is the book that is a collection of symbolic pictures, usually accompanied by mottoes
and expositions in verse and often also by a prose commentary?
12. What is the literary term that refers to a brief and generally anonymous satirical comment in
prose or verse that ridicules a contemporary leader or national event?
15. What is the term that refers to the main male character in a literary work, but it is also used
in a specialized sense for any figure celebrated in the ancient legends of a people or in such
early heroic epics as Gilgamesh, the Iliad, Beowulf, or La Chanson de Roland?
16. What is the literary term for a literary genre in Arabic which entertaining anecdotes, often
about rogues, mountebanks, and beggars, written in an elegant, rhymed prose (saj‘), are
presented in a dramatic or narrative context most suitable for the display of the author’s
eloquence, wit, and erudition?
17. What is a the term for a short tale that is often recounting an adventure?
18. What is the name of work of fiction in which the thoughts, feelings, and motivations of the
characters are of equal or greater interest than is the external action of the narrative?
21. What is the term of the kind of tale that refers to an African form of short story whose
ending is either open to conjecture or is morally ambiguous, thus allowing the audience to
comment or speculate upon the correct solution to the problem posed in the tale?
22. What is the name of literary and dramatic form , in which human or individual vices, follies,
abuses, or shortcomings are held up to censure by means of ridicule, derision, burlesque,
irony, parody, caricature, or other methods, some?times with an intent to inspire social
reform?
23. What is the class of novel that deals with the maturation process, with how and why the
protagonist develops, both morally and psychologically?
24. What is the term for work of fiction that have a form of European Romantic,
pseudomedieval fiction having a prevailing atmosphere of mystery and terror?
25. What is the term which means “sagas of antiquity,” and it refers to a class of Icelandic sagas
dealing with the ancient myths and hero legends of Germania, with the adventures of
Vikings, or with other exotic adventures in foreign lands?

DOWN:

1. What is the name of a genre in storytelling (novels, short stories, motion pictures, and
television and radio shows) that set in the American West, usually in the period from the
1850s to the end of the 19th century?
3. What is the term that refers to a kind of literary work containing a medieval tale of
adventure told in alternating sections of sung verse and recited prose?
4. What is the term of a kind of novel that told through the medium of letters written by one or
more of the characters?
5. What is the term that refers to an invented prose narrative of considerable length and a
certain complexity that deals imaginatively with human experience, usually through a
connected sequence of events involving a group of persons in a specific setting?
7. What is the literary term for the work of fiction that usually contains a tale about animals
who are personified and behave as though they were humans?
9. What is the literary term that refers to biographical novel that deals with the period of a
young person’s social and moral initiation into adulthood?
11. What is a literary genre of the European Middle Ages consisting of a collection of stories,
each based on a description of certain qualities of an animal, plant, or inanimate object (such
as a stone)?
13. What is the type of novels that were inexpensive, usually paperback, melodramatic novel of
adventure popular in the United States roughly between 1860 and 1915?
14. What is the literary term for a short tale originally incorporated by a medieval preacher into
his sermon to emphasize a moral or illustrate a point of doctrine?
19. What is the genre of a novel that has its setting a period of history and that attempts to
convey the spirit, manners, and social conditions of a past age with realistic detail and
fidelity (which is in some cases only apparent fidelity) to historical fact?
20. What is the term for the imaginative fiction that is dependent for effect on strangeness of
setting (such as other worlds or times) and of characters (such as supernatural or unnatural
beings)?
1 2 3 4

9 10 11

12 13 14

15

16

17

18 19

20

21

22

23

24

25

EclipseCrossword.com
ANSWER KEY OF PROSE CROSSWORD

ACROSS:

2. DETECTIVE
6. PLOT
8. NARRATOLOGY
10. EMBLEM
12. PASQUINADE
15. HERO
16. MAQAMAH
17. CONTE
18. PSYCHOLOGICAL
21. DILEMMA
22. SATIRE
23. BILDUNGSROMAN
24. GOTHIC
25. FORNALDARSARS

DOWN:

1. WESTERN
3. CHANTEFABLE
4. EPISTOLARY
5. NOVEL
7. FABLE
9. APPRENTICESHIP
11. BESTIARY
13. DIME
14. EXEMPLUM
19. HISTORICAL
20. FANTASY
1 2 3 4
W D E T E C T I V E
5
E N H P
6
S P L O T A I
T V N S
7
E F E T T
8
N A R R A T O L O G Y E O
N B F L
L A A
9 10 11
A E M B L E M B R
P E L Y
12 13 14
P P A S Q U I N A D E E
15
H E R O T I X
16
E I M A Q A M A H E
17
C O N T E A E M
T R P
18 19
I P S Y C H O L O G I C A L
20
C I U F
21
E S D I L E M M A
22
S S A T I R E N
H O T
23
B I L D U N G S R O M A N A
P I S
24
G O T H I C Y
A
25
F O R N A L D A R S A R S
EclipseCrossword.com
PROSE WORD SEARCH

(Source: Kuiper, Kathleen. PROSE LITERARY TERMS AND CONCEPTS. New York:
Britannica Educational Publishing. 2012.)

DIRECTION: Discover the hidden words. Circle the words listed below.

1. NOVEL (an invented prose narrative of considerable length and a certain complexity that
deals imaginatively with human experience, usually through a connected sequence of
events involving a group of persons in a specific setting).
2. PLOT (the device of hundred or thousand pages that propelled a novel).
3. APPRENTICESHIP (biographical novel that deals with the period of a young person’s
social and moral initiation into adulthood).
4. BILDUNGSROMAN (a class of novel that deals with the maturation process, with how
and why the protagonist develops, both morally and psychologically).
5. DIME (type of inexpensive, usually paperback, melodramatic novel
of adventure popular in the United States roughly between 1860 and 1915).
6. EPISTOLARY (a kind of novel that told through the medium of letters written by one or
more of the characters).
7. GOTHIC (a form of European Romantic, pseudomedieval fiction having a prevailing
atmosphere of mystery and terror).
8. HISTORICAL (a novel that has its setting a period of history and that attempts to convey
the spirit, manners, and social conditions of a past age with realistic detail and fidelity
(which is in some cases only apparent fidelity) to historical fact).
9. PSYCHOLOGICAL (a work of fiction in which the thoughts, feelings, and motivations
of the characters are of equal or greater interest than is the external action of the
narrative).
10. WESTERN (a genre of storytelling (novels, short stories, motion pictures, and television
and radio shows) set in the American West, usually in the period from the 1850s to the
end of the 19th century).
11. FANTASY (the imaginative fiction that is dependent for effect on strangeness of setting
(such as other worlds or times) and of characters (such as supernatural or unnatural
beings)).
12. FABLE (the work of fiction that usually contains a tale about animals who are
personified and behave as though they were humans).
13. BESTIARY (a literary genre of the European Middle Ages consisting of a collection of
stories, each based on a description of certain qualities of an animal, plant, or inanimate
object (such as a stone).
14. EMBLEM (the book that is a collection of symbolic pictures, usually accompanied by
mottoes and expositions in verse and often also by a prose commentary).
15. EXEMPLUM (a short tale originally incorporated by a medieval preacher into his sermon
to emphasize a moral or illustrate a point of doctrine).
16. CHANTEFABLE (a kind of literary work containing a medieval tale of adventure told in
alternating sections of sung verse and recited prose).
17. FORNALDARSARS (a class of Icelandic sagas dealing with the ancient myths and hero
legends of Germania, with the adventures of Vikings, or with other exotic adventures in
foreign lands).
18. HERO (the main male character in a literary work, but it is also used in a specialized
sense for any figure celebrated in the ancient legends of a people or in such early heroic
epics as Gilgamesh, the Iliad, Beowulf, or La Chanson de Roland).
19. CONTE (a short tale that is often recounting an adventure).
20. DETECTIVE (the type of popular literature in which a crime is introduced and
investigated and the culprit is revealed).
21. DILEMMA (an African form of short story whose ending is either open to conjecture or
is morally ambiguous, thus allowing the audience to comment or speculate upon the
correct solution to the problem posed in the tale).
22. MAQAMAH (an Arabic literary genre in which entertaining anecdotes, often about
rogues, mountebanks, and beggars, written in an elegant, rhymed prose (saj‘), are
presented in a dramatic or narrative context most suitable for the display of the author’s
eloquence, wit, and erudition).
23. SATIRE (a chiefly literary and dramatic artistic form, in which human or individual
vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings are held up to censure by means of ridicule,
derision, burlesque, irony, parody, caricature, or other methods, sometimes with an intent
to inspire social reform).
24. PASQUINADE (a brief and generally anonymous satirical comment in prose or verse
that ridicules a contemporary leader or national event).
25. NARRATOLOGY (study that tells about the structure of narrative which looks at what
narratives have in common and what makes one different from another).
Z B I L D U N G S R O M A N U O E Z M X H E R O V
D R V F G O W I H W U R I O R T X L A R X P I E A
E P A S Q U I N A D E H L V Y O E I Q M I I O S G
T B R F U B T B H L O N L E C Z M S A Y H S G L F
E J T C K M L P S E C G A L S C P T M X M T A S O
C Y Q H U S A E E I B L E P F A L O A U M O L A R

T Q F A T M W I M H O D G H D L U G H M O L E T N

I R U N E F F A B L E U A I P D M P E R V R R I A

V G Q T S N L M L N L O A S O L M L S O I Y V R L

E N B E E O A I E A P N L T O E I D N T Y E A E D

L M R F H Q D I M E R S R O X D N I C R L T L Z A

E N P A A E Q L E O N A R R A T O L O G Y A P F R

S P Y B E S K R F F Q R W I D O T E A O C G G J S

A L K L A Y I I P A R Z U C P E T M F T R W X Y A

M O L E L T Q X U N W Z I A D S E M R H Q E Q Q R

E T E G A L A M N T A L R L K T H A L I A S N I S

C W K S B E S T I A R Y P B N V T N K C Y T H L V

A Q U Z K T O C P S Y V P A S S J I D W R E J W G

P S Y C H O L O G Y C A L H I B Y I V B O R R V P

A P P R E N T I C E S H I P Q H L D D C O N T E V
ANSWER KEY OF PROSE WORD SEARCH

Z B I L D U N G S R O M A N U O E Z M X H E R O V
D R V F G O W I H W U R I O R T X L A R X P I E A
E P A S Q U I N A D E H L V Y O E I Q M I I O S G
T B R F U B T B H L O N L E C Z M S A Y H S G L F
E J T C K M L P S E C G A L S C P T M X M T A S O
C Y Q H U S A E E I B L E P F A L O A U M O L A R

T Q F A T M W I M H O D G H D L U G H M O L E T N

I R U N E F F A B L E U A I P D M P E R V R R I A

V G Q T S N L M L N L O A S O L M L S O I Y V R L

E N B E E O A I E A P N L T O E I D N T Y E A E D

L M R F H Q D I M E R S R O X D N I C R L T L Z A

E N P A A E Q L E O N A R R A T O L O G Y A P F R

S P Y B E S K R F F Q R W I D O T E A O C G G J S

A L K L A Y I I P A R Z U C P E T M F T R W X Y A

M O L E L T Q X U N W Z I A D S E M R H Q E Q Q R

E T E G A L A M N T A L R L K T H A L I A S N I S

C W K S B E S T I A R Y P B N V T N K C Y T H L V

A Q U Z K T O C P S Y V P A S S J I D W R E J W G

P S Y C H O L O G Y C A L H I B Y I V B O R R V P

A P P R E N T I C E S H I P Q H L D D C O N T E V

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