WAEC Past Questions For Literature In English
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WAEC Past Questions For Literature In English 2024

WAEC past questions for Literature in English is very important for every art student because even in Jamb Examination, it is a must write subject.

In this post, we are going to list out all the past questions as we believe if you combine it with you study, you won’t look frustrated inside the exam hall. Don’t forget to share this content with your people or classmates that might also need this.

WAEC Past Questions For Literature In English

1. The moon looked on the massacre in horror ! illustrates
  • A. pathetic fallacy
  • B. prologue
  • C. epilogue
  • D. transferred epithet
2. A dead metaphor is
  • A. overused and ineffective
  • B. implied and not funny
  • C. implied and underused
  • D. overused and funny
3. The third stanza of the Shakespearean sonnet is
  • A. couplet
  • B. sextet
  • C. octave
  • D. quatrain

Read the poem below and answer the question below:

Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn,
Grew lean while he assailed the season; He wept that he was ever born,
And he had reasons.
Miniver loved the days of old
When swords were bright and steeds prancing; The vision of a warrior bold
Would set him dancing.

4. child of scorn illustrates
  • A. euphemism
  • B. contrast
  • B. metaphor
  • D. metonymy
5. The metrical structure is predominantly
  • A. trochaic
  • B. dactylic
  • C. iambic
  • D. spondaic
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6. Reading the poem, one notices that the poet is being

 

  • A. hyperbolic
  • B. euphemistic
  • C. ironic
  • D. sarcastic
7. In the last stanza, the persona is
  • A. fantasizing
  • B. angry
  • C. malnourished
  • D. pretending
8. The two stanzas are built on
  • A. alternate rhyme
  • B. identical rhymes
  • C. couplets
  • D. run-on lines
UNSEEN PROSE AND POETRY
Read the passage below and answer the following questions:
Along marched the crowd, determined not to be distracted from its cause and the course it had charted. If anyone could intimidate the chief, it was Sasu, who led the crowd. The chief nurtured unruffled restraint. He knew Sasu, knew that Sasu would not waste the trust between them on renegades.
One way to divert a mob from its goal is to join in with it, lead it on, but, finally, veer it from the course of its cause. Onward, towards the chief’s palace marched the crowd, singing war songs.
The sun frowned as the palace guards, rattling like leaves in a storm – fear branded on their faces, came out to survey the threatening crowd and prepare for a siege. Just then, Sasu turned about, heading away from the palace – with the crowd, and the war songs.
9. The prevailing atmosphere is
  • A. pleasant
  • B. drab
  • C. tense
  • D. serene
10. join in with it, lead it on, but, finally,veer it from illustrates
  • A. allusion
  • B. simile
  • C. parallelism
  • D. personification

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11. The attitude of the writer towards Sasu is one of
  • A. surprise
  • B. anger
  • C. approval
  • D. disdain
12. rattling like leaves in a storm, fear branded on their faces illustrates
  • A. personification and simile
  • B. personification and metaphor
  • C. simile and metaphor
  • D. assonance and simile
13. The last paragraph illustrates
  • A. anti-climax
  • B. rising action
  • C. suspense
  • D. foreshadow
14. Letters, journals and diaries are examples of
  • A. faction
  • B. meta-fiction
  • C. fiction
  • D. nonfiction
15. A dramatic performance with scenes played by body movements or gestures without words known as
  • A. comedy
  • B. pantomime
  • C. panegyric
  • D. melodrama

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16. The speaker is
  • A. Hippolyta
  • B. Lysander
  • C. Pyramus
  • D. Bottom
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17. The character that speaks before the speaker

  • A. Demetrius
  • B. Theseus
  • C. Pyramus
  • D. Hippolyta
18. It is not enough to speak, but to speak true illustrates
  • A. parable
  • B. epitaph
  • C. wisecrack
  • D. epigram
19. The character that speaks after the speaker is
  • A. Lysander
  • B. Demetrius
  • C. Titania
  • D. Hippolyta
20. The character that delivers the prologue is
  • A. Snug
  • B. Starveling
  • C. Snout
  • D. Quince

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21. Exaggerating one’s personal features for comic effect is
  • A. caricature
  • B. lampoon
  • C. contrast
  • D. satire
22. That girl is too young to be put in the family way illustrates
  • A. euphemism
  • B. hyperbole
  • C. oxymoron
  • D. paradox

23. At the last head count, the population of the school was three thousand is an example of

  • A. synecdoche
  • B. hyperbole
  • C. metonymy
  • D. pun
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Read the extract below and answer the following question:
That fallen am I in dark uneven way,
Come, thou gentle day;
For if but once thou show me thy grey light,
I’ll find , and revenge this spite.

24. The speaker is
  • A. Lysander
  • B. Thisbe
  • C. Egeus
  • D. Tatiana
25. The speaker is addressing
  • A. Helena
  • B. Hermia
  • C. Demetrius
  • D. himself
26. The speaker is in
  • A. the woods
  • B. his apartment
  • C. a street
  • D. the palace
27. Come, thou gentle day illustrates
  • A. apostrophe
  • B. irony
  • C. paradox
  • D. euphemism
28. After the speech, the speaker
  • A. begins to dance
  • B. laughs uncontrollably
  • C. falls asleep
  • D. starts crying
29. The extract presents the image of a
  • A. enough time
  • B. bright day
  • C. dark night
  • D. calm weather
30. The dominant literary device used in the extract is
  • A. parallelism
  • B. apostrophe
  • C. personification
  • D. antithesis
31. The speaker is
  • A. Egeus
  • B. Hermia
  • C. Demetrius
  • D. Helena
32. The speech shows that the speaker is
  • A. high spirits
  • B. disappointed
  • C. excited
  • D. in a bad mood
33. The speaker’s mood stems from
  • A. being rejected by the lover
  • B. having to go into the forest
  • C. wanting to punish Hermia
  • D. meeting with Hermia
34. The speaker has just said farewell to
  • A. Helena
  • B. Demetrius
  • C. Hermia
  • D. Lysander
35. The speaker resolves to tell
  • A. Lysander of Hermia’s infidelity
  • B. Demetrius of Hermia’s flight
  • C. Egeus of Hermia’s flight
  • D. Theseus of Hermia’s infidelity
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Read the extract below and answer the following question:

(In the Town Hall)
Jonesy: (By himself, centre right, looking sulky) How does anyone keep faith with himself In such an ill-made place?
Bassy, Ba-a-ssy!
Bassy: Here. Anything the matter?
Jonesy: (Moves front stage centre right) Your mayoral hopeful.

36. Jonesy’s opening speech illustrates
  • A. epilogue
  • B. soliloquy
  • C. mime
  • D. aside
37. In the Town hall is the
  • A. setting
  • B. location
  • C. atmosphere
  • D. stage
38. Bassy is a ____ in the play.
  • A. narrator
  • B. director
  • C. producer
  • D. character
39. Jonesy’s speech Your mayoral hopeful is addressed to
  • A. the audience
  • B. Bassey
  • C. no one
  • D. himself
40. A fable is also known as
  • A. an apologue
  • B. an epigram
  • C. a farce
  • D. a parody

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41. A character that is built around a single idea or quality is a _______ character.
  • A. heroic
  • B. flat
  • C. choral
  • D. sound
42. Resolution in a literary work is also referred to as
  • A. events that increase action
  • B. final outcome
  • C. the complication
  • D. event that increases tension
43. The third stanza of the Shakespearean sonnet is
  • A. quatrain
  • B. octave
  • C. sextet
  • D. couplet

44. A short poem lamenting the death of someone is

  • A. an ode
  • B. a threnody
  • C. a sonnet
  • D. an epic
45. Seven metrical feet in a line of a stanza is
  • A. hexameter
  • B. heptametre
  • C. septet
  • D. triolet

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Read the extract below and answer the question: 
Lysander riddles very prettily;
Now much beshrew my manners and my pride, If Hermia meant to say Lysander lied.
But, gentle friend, for love and courtesy Lie further off, in human modesty;
Such separation as may well be said
Becomes a virtuous bachelor and a maid;
So far be distant, and good night, sweet friend: Thy love ne’er alter, till thy sweet life end!

46. The speaker is
  • A. Hermia
  • B. Helena
  • C. Hippolyta
  • D. Tatiana
47. The speech is made in
  • A. Oberon’s place
  • B. the woods
  • C. the Queen’s palace
  • D. Theseus’ palace
48. The speaker and the addressee are
  • A. father and daughter
  • B. master and servant
  • C. lovers
  • D. friends
49. Now much beshrew my manners and my pride, illustrates the use of
  • A. alliteration
  • B. onomatopoeia
  • C. assonance
  • D. personification
50. Thy love ne’er alter, till thy sweet life end.’ implies
  • A. an enduring love
  • B. a family love
  • C. an undying love
  • D. a fickle love

Frequently Asked Questions

Is literature a hard paper?

it is not as hard as people paint it to be, but with good preparation, you will see how simple it can be.

How much to register for WAEC?

WAEC is registered with just 27,000 naira.

Conclusion

Practicing with WAEC past questions for Literature in English is really important. It helps you see what kinds of questions come up most often and understand better how to analyze texts. By going through these old questions, you can get a clearer picture of what to expect on the exam and improve your approach to studying the texts. This can really help you do well in your WAEC Literature in English exam.

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