NECO Literature in English Questions and Answers2022/2023 ( Proposition and Ideal)

 NECO Literature in English Questions and Answers2022/2023 ( Proposition and Ideal) 

 NECO Literature Questions and Answers 2022. I'll be showing you past Literature ideal and proposition repeated questions and NECO Literature Drama and Poetry for free in this post. You'll also understand how NECO Literature in English questions are set and how to answer them. 

 NECO theory 

 The National Examinations Council (NECO) is an examination body in Nigeria that conducts the Elderly Secondary Certificate Examination and the General Certificate in Education in June/ July and December/ January independently. 

 



 

 1 NECO Literature Objects and Essay (Prose) Answers 2022 ( Exhibit) 

1.0.1 Have a Target and Work Towards Appearing it 

1.0.2 Get the Recommended Textbook on Literature for 2022 NECO Examination 

1.0.3 Don't Skip Literature Exemplifications and Exercise you Will Come Across While Reading 

 NECO Literature Objects and Essay (Prose) Answers 2022 ( Exhibit) 

 The 2022 NECO Literature exhibit will be posted then during the NECO Literature examination. Keep checking and reloading this runner for the answers. 

 

 NECO 2022 Literature Answers Loading … 

 

 NECO Literature OBJ Answers 

 

 1-10 DCDBDCCEBB 

 

 11-20 ECEBBEEDDC 

 

 21-30 EBADADEAAA 

 

 31-40 EEDACDBABC 

 

 41-50 ADABCACDCC 

 

 51-60 BDEDBACBED 

 

 LITERATURE- Proposition 

 

 (1) 

 

 The eight- time-old Adah, who was born in Lagos during World War 2, only dreams of going to academy since she isn't allowed to attend academy because she isn't a boy. One day, when her mama is detracted, Adah goes to the Methodist School where her neighbour teaches, and he allows her to learn with them for the day. She returns home meeting a group of bobbies in their emulsion. 

 

 Her mama is being penalized for child neglect, yet Adah is allowed to continue attending academy. 

 

 Months latterly, Adah father goes to the sanitarium but doesn't return. His demise makes his nuclear family to separate. His woman, Adah’s mama, is inherited by his family. His son, Adah’s family, goes to live with one of his (Adah father’s) relatives whereas Adah is transferred to live with one of her mama’s sisters. 

 

 

 

 Adah is allowed to remain in academy only because she could bring a advanced bridegroom price if educated. Suitors come; still, she isn't interested in any of them. Rather, fascinated with the possibility of winning a education to secondary academy, Adah steals the plutocrat for the sitting figure, passes the examination, and wins the education. She attends the Methodist Girls’School and completes the four- time course. 

 

 Knowing sharp well that she'll not be allowed to live on her own in the university, Adah marries a pupil named Francis Obi (who is too poor to pay the bridegroom price) with the stopgap of being suitable to attend academy and study at her own pace. She births a son and begins working for the American Consulate Library. Having had the dream of going to the United Kingdom, she shares it with her hubby. They decide to go, but his family, who depends upon her income, approves of his leaving but insists that Adah remain at home and continue to support the family. Her hubby’s father doesn't authorize of women going to England. At first, 

 

 

 Adah is filled with rage, but she controls her wrathfulness and comes up with a plan – “ Be as cunning as a serpent but as inoffensive as a dove,” she quoted to herself. Formerly again, she uses her cleverness to get what she wants. She sends Francis (her hubby) off to England to study while she works and sends him plutocrat in the meantime. 

 

 Adah is known for her perseverance; she doesn't give up. When her hubby writes to her a many months latterly that he's going to be in England for at least four or five times, she decides it's time to make her move. She convinces her in- laws that it's necessary for her to be in England with her hubby, stating that her hubby wants her there, 

 which he did say to her in the letter. She soon books herself and her two children first class tickets on a boat to England. As a boding of all that's to come for her, Adah arrives England, ate by cold, stormy and cloudy skies. She's shocked by the greyness but won't give up on her dreams. Adah has arrived in the United Kingdom where she becomes a alternate class citizen. She's only a first class citizen in Nigeria. 

 

 Some of the main points of struggle for Adah are being a black woman in a generally white society, literacy of the women’s right movement during the seventies, the fact that there's birth control available to her, and the struggle to pursue her thing in getting a pen between four children and a lazy vituperative hubby. 

 

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 (2) 

 

 Adah and her children enter the UK through Liverpool, and she's greatly dissatisfied by her first sight of her dream country the dark, cloudy, artificial megacity gives her pause. Still, she remembers how important it's to her that her children have an English education. Adah and the children disembark and reunite with Francis, who sees his son for the first time. 

 

 Adah notices that Francis has changed significantly. He makes jokes about death, which he attributes to the English people’s odd sense of humour. Adah is skeptical of this, however, because she does n’t suppose the people around her look like they've senses of humour. He says that she has come bolder and speaks to him in a way she'd not have in Lagos. Adah interprets his reflections as substantiation that men have further rights and boons than women do, indeed in England. They board the train to London, and on the trip, Adah sees snow for the first time. She's beginning to feel more hopeful about England now that she has seen some of its beautiful geographies. 

 

 Once in London, Francis takes them to their lodgment. Adah can not believe how close the structures are to one another, and Francis tells her that in Nigeria, there's further land to spread out. Their home country isn't at the point yet where every available space is erected up, as in London. Next, he takes her to their apartment, which is veritably small and meager; there's only one room, no bath or kitchen, and no private restroom, the collaborative restroom is four bottoms downward. Adah has not been told ahead of time what the apartment will be suchlike and is shocked to see the bareness of the room. 

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 (7) 

 

 Emily Bronte’s repeated injection of death into Wuthering Heights is striking and plays with several dispatches relating to connections, both domestic and romantic. Indeed though death has a negative connotation, Bronte uses it to promote a communication. 

 

 Nearly all the chapters in Wuthering Heights concentrate on someone dying, someone who has lately failed, or someone who's about to die. None of these deaths be as a result of old age, and they're frequently prefigured long before they be.Mrs. Earnshaw dies first, followed byMr. Earnshaw, Frances, the elderMr. andMrs. Linton, Catherine, Hindley, Isabella, Edgar, the youthful Linton, and Heathcliff. Those who survive the story are Nelly, Joseph, Cathy, and Hearton. A kind of saddening irony comes at the end of the novel whenMr. Lockwood and Nelly are agitating the arrangements for the Wuthering Heights estate and he comments that maybe ghosts (which there should be plenitude of now) might come and inhabit it. Nelly doesn't agree with him on this byword, she believes the dead are at peace, and it isn't right to speak of them with frivolity. Though Nelly has spent the last two-hundred runners tattling to Lockwood at his request about all the tragedies that happed before he arrived. 

 

 

 

 There are about eleven deaths. Some are introduced beforehand on, for case, Frances who arrives at Wuthering Heights duringMr. Earnshaw’s burial and has a breakdown saying she was so hysterical of dying, only to die a time or so latterly. There's the youthful Linton’s appearance to the Grange when Cathy and her father are agitating how well he'll do if they can keep him, which has a double meaning relating to keeping Linton with them and keeping him alive in general; dispensable to say he dies. Edgar’s living long in the story is as surprised as anything. But when his woman failed and Nelly described him as a man who execrated God and man, and gave himself up to reckless dispersion, we get the gist he (Edgar) was n’t really going to be “ living” for the rest of the novel. 

 

 Also there are the deaths of Catherine and Heathcliff, the first of which happens fairly early on and we're apprehensive of for the wholeness of the novel and the latterly which ends the novel. These are the deaths the novel is powered by and also waits for. Catherine and Heathcliff’s unhealthy relationship when they were alive carries over into eternity when she dies and he says, “ Catherine Earnshaw, may you not rest, as long as I'm living! … I can not live without my life! I can not live without my soul!” In a way, Heathcliff gests a living death analogous to Edgar, where he's still veritably important alive but all the good corridor of him have failed and he's being driven by the anguish of another’s death. All of the trouble they caused when she was alive is baffled by the madness Heathcliff endures and inflicts after her death, and peace only comes when they're reunited in death. 

 

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 (8) 

 

 Isabella is Edgar’s youngish family. She's known to be a weak and putrid child. In the novel, she becomes infatuated by Heathcliff, seeing him as a romantic idol who in turn despises her and uses her purely as a tool in his vengeance. She's a discrepancy both physically and spiritually to Catherine. 

 

 When we first see her, she's fighting over a pup with Edgar, and she noway really grows beyond this adolescent stage. She seems to suffer from a combination of tedium and covetousness of Catherine. 

 

 

 

 Her passion with Heathcliff comes across as both parlous and silly ( intruding with Catherine’s man?). When she marries Heathcliff, she pays dearly by being disowned by Edgar and locked at the Heights by her violent hubby. Though we noway know for sure, she seems interested in Heathcliff incompletely because he’s a dark and miscarrying hunk, and incompletely as a way of contending with Catherine. Also again, there aren't numerous other options for her. 

 

 

 

 That she hugely fails to fete the degree to which Heathcliff is using her speaks to her love of psychodrama. Like a fool, she yearns to be with Heathcliff and confesses to Catherine that she loves Heathcliff more than Catherine loved Edgar. 

 

 Isabella eventually wises up and leaves for London, but not before getting pregnant with Linton Heathcliff, who winds up with both of his parents’worst rates. 

 

 The questions below are the Neco once questions and answers that will help you in your 2021 NECO Literature Questions. 

 

 The questions below are the NECO 2021 Literature Practice Questions. Go through them and be ready to score grandly in your NECO 2021 Literature in English Examination. 

 

 

 

 1. In Literature generally, a stock character is a character 

.A. who plays the part of a stock 

B. broker or trafficker 

C. whose conduct, speech, style, and part are predicable 

.D. whose manner is as stiff as a dry stockfish 

E. Fraud 

 

 ANSWER C (whose conduct, speech, style, and part are predicable) 

 2. A light or entertaining interim fitted in the middle of a woeful play is called 

 

A. a ridiculous relief 

 

B. an aggression 

 

C.a discrepancy 

 

D. divagation 

 

E. drama 

 ANSWER A ( ridiculous relief) 

 

 3. When one author produces a mocking assignation of another author’s work we call his product 

A. a conceit 

B. an aggression 

C. a discrepancy 

D. a parody 

E. Monologue 

 ANSWER D ( parody) 


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