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DRAMA - Jamb Literature in English Past Questions and Answers

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Jamb Literature in English Past Questions

Jamb Past Questions and Answers on DRAMA

Question 111:


This question is based on Wole Soyinka's The Lion and the Jewel.
'...But there have been
No new reads cut by his servants
No new cots woven..'
It can be inferred from the above lines that

A. There has been no harvest in the village
B. The Bale's sevants are lazy
C. No children have been born recently
D. The Bale's servants are revolting


Question 112:


This question is based on Wole Soyinka's The Lion and the Jewel.
'...He risked his life that you may boast
A warrior-hunter for your lord...But you-
You sell him to the rhyming rabble
Gloating in your disloyalty...
In these lines the 'rhyming rabble' refers to

A. Clowns who wait on the Bale
B. Children in Lakunle's school
C. Professional singers
D. The mummers who dance in mockery of the Bale's rumoured impotence


Question 113:


This question is based on George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man .
Petkoff [grinning] 'Sergius: tell Catherine that queer story his friend told us about how he escaped after Slivnitza. You remember.
About his being hid by two women'
Since the phrase 'two women in the above extract refers to Petkoff's own daughter and wife, his grinning is a case of

A. Sarcasm
B. Ridicule
C. Irony
D. Suspense


Question 114:


This question is based on George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man .
In what particular way did Raina demonstrate that she had fallen in love with Captain Bluntschli by the end of their first meeting?

A. By giving him chocolate creams which he preferred to bullets
B. By introducing him to hermother
C. By giving him her portrait with an inscription
D. By saving his life from the Serbian soldiers


Question 115:


This question is based on George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man .
'He did it like an operatic tenor. A regular handsome fellow, with flashing eyes and lovely moustache, shouting his war-cry and charging like Don Quixote at the windmills...'
This account of an important battle in the play carries a tone of

A. Admiration
B. Mockery
C. Bitterness
D. Alarm






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