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A&I LIT Vocab

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Term
Definition
Accentual meter   stressed rhythmic structure of poetic lines  
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Agon   Struggle  
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Alexandrine   12 syllable line written in iambic hexameter  
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Allergorical   A naritive that is an extended metaphor  
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Alliteration   repetition in a consonant  
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Allusion   A reference to a person place or thing in another work or history  
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Anapest   2 short syllables followed by 1 long syllable  
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Antagonist   The one who struggles against or contends with the protagonist  
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Apostrophe   Direct address to someone or something not present  
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Argumentative   Describes writting that establishes a position and support it with evidence  
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Assonsnce   Repetition of vowel sounds  
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Aubade   A morning love song  
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Ballad   A narrative folk song or set to music  
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Balled stanza   Four line stanzas consisting of alternating four- and three- stress lines  
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Bathos   Abrupt changes in style going from exalted to mundane  
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Blank verse   Unrhymed iambic pentameter  
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Ceasura   A complete pause in a line of poetry  
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Catastrophe   Final resolution in a poem or narrative that unravels the plot and concludes the work  
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Catharsis   Cleaning or purging  
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Climax   Turning point in a story, action stops building and begins to fall  
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Closed form   Poetry specified to pre specified requirments of rhyme  
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Complication   Eliment introduced into the plot to alter its course  
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Conceits   Extended metaphor governing an entire passage or poem  
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Conclusion   Final division that brings the work to and end  
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Connotation   Emotional association that accompanies a certain word or phrase  
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Consonance   Repetition of a conconant sound in short succesion  
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Conventional   Following accepted standards  
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Couplet   Two consecutive lines in poetry  
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Crisis   Turning point in a story, clumination of the events  
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Dactyl   A foot in meter of poetry. greek:long followed by 2 short, English: stressed followed by 2 unstressed  
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Denotation   Literal meaning  
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Denouement   The conclusion of a story  
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Diction   Word choice  
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Dimeter   A line containting only two metrical feet  
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Doggerel   Derogatory term for verse with little literary value  
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Dramatic monologue   Speech delivered by a single charachter  
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Dynamic   A character whose personality changes  
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Elegy   A sorrowful, melancholic poem  
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Enacted   Preformed by an actor or actors  
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End rhyme   Repetition of siilar sound in two or more worlds  
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Enjambment   A line having no end punctuation so that the meaning countinues uniterupted to the next line  
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Epic   A long narrative poem written in elevated language and style about the expoits of a hero or heroine  
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Epigram   A short verse apperning at the beginning of a longer work to set the mood or reveal the stories meaning  
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Exposition   The author's explanation of the bachground information  
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Expository   Writing or discourse with the primary purpose of informing, clarifying, or explaning  
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Expressionism   Subjective depiction of the real world through imagination  
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Falling action   Moment following the climax, problem is solved  
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Farce   Comedy that entertains the audience through absurdity  
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Feminine rhyme   Two or more syllables match in the ryhyming words  
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Fiction   Imaginary narrative; the information or events are created by the author  
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Figurative   Deviation from usual meaning of a word or group of words resulting in a specific affect or meaning  
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Figurative image   Picture painted by the writer usually a poet  
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Fixed form   Any one of three foureenth and fifteenth-century French poectic form: the ballad , the virelai, and rondeau  
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Foil   A character who highlights through contrast opposite charachteristics in another character  
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Foot   Basic unit of meter consisting of a set number of stressed and unstressed syllables  
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Form   Pattern or design of a poem (closed or open form)  
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Free verse   Poetry using natural rhythms of words and phrases  
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Hamartia   A tragic flaw within a character  
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Heptameter   Line with seven metrical feet  
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Heroic couplet   Two successive lines of iambic pentameter with the second lines usually ending with a stop  
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Hexameter   Line with 6 metrical feet  
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High comedy   Comedy carried out by characters that are true to life or realistic  
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The how   The authors style  
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Hyperbole   Exaggeration  
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Iambic foot   Unstressed followed by a stresses syllable  
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Iambic meter   Iambic foot  
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Iambic pentameter   Line of 5 feet with unstressed then stressed syllable  
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Iambic pentameter   Line of 5 feet with unstressed then stressed syllable  
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Iambic rhythm   Rising and falling rhythm, alternating stressed and unstressed syllables  
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Image   Word picture painted by the writer  
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Imagine   To visualize the picture evoked by the writer through the sense  
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Imagism   Free imagery, open interpretation  
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Impressionism   Subjective or personal literary style that relies on association  
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Internal rhyme   A word rhyming at the end of the line with a word in the middle of the line  
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Introduction   First stage in a plot which the author establishes the situation and shares background information  
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Invective   Writing that attacks a person or idea through emotional language  
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Inversion   Doing or saying the opposite or unexpected  
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Irony   Discrepancy between what is said or done and what is meant  
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Limericks   A five line humor or nonsensical poem in which the first two lines are anapestic trimester then the next two are anapestic diameter and the last line is trimester, the rhyme scheme is aab  
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Literal   The meaning of a word or phrase according to the dictionary denotation  
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Literary ballad   Four rhyming lines (abcb) with lines 1 and 3 having eight syllables and lines 2 and 4 having six  
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Low comedy   Humor with absurdities  
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Lyric   A poem sharing personal emotions in classical poetry accompanied by a lyre  
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Masculine rhyme   A rhyme that matches just one syllable  
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Metaphor   Comparison of two unlike I teams  
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Meter   Basic rhythmic structure for lines in poetic verse  
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Metonym   A figure of speech in which and idea or a thing is referenced by a a name closely associated with it "a change of name"  
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Mimesis   "Imitation" mimetic theory from Aristotle held that successful imitation in art portrayed reality as closely as possible  
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Mock heroic   Satire or parody that mocks the classical stereotype of a hero or heroic literature  
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Mode   A broad literary method not tied to one specific form or genre such as irony or satire  
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Manometer   A line of verse with one foot  
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Motif   An object concept or structure repeated in a literary work thereby giving it symbolic significance in the story  
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Narrative   The events that tell the story  
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Narrator   An individual who tells or speaks the story  
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Naturalism   Literary movement that depicts life as accurately as possible  
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Neo-classical   A style of prose and poetry from seventeenth and eighteenth centuries reviving a classical style from Greek to roman culture  
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Non-fiction   Writing that delivers factual events and observations  
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Novel   An extended fictional narrative written in prose that includes characters plots and setting  
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Octameter   A line of poetry of eight meters cal feet  
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Octave   Poetic verse of eight lines of iambic pentameter  
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Ode   Lyrical verse or poem with a serious topic and tone  
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Onomatopoeia   Use of a word that suggests or mimics it's meaning through sound  
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Open form   Poetry that does not follow a predetermined form freedom in the form of a poem  
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Oxymoron   A figure of speech where two words opposite in meaning are placed next to each other  
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Paradox   A statement that seems absurd or contradictory but it is true  
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Parody   A work that mocks an original work character or style through humorous imitation  
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Personification   Figure of speech that attributes human characteristics to inanimate objects or animals  
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Phonic   Pertaining to sound from speech  
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Plot   The series of events that makeup the story  
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Point of view   The perspective or vantage point from which the author chooses to tell the story  
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Prose   The most common form of written language following natural speech patterns and grammatical structure  
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Protagonist   Main character in a literary work, literally one who struggles toward or for something  
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Pun   A play on the meaning of a word or of similar-sounding words for an intended effect  
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Quatrain   Four line of verse making up a stanza or a poem  
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Realism   Delivering subjects from third person objective point of view with no added interpretation or elaboration  
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Resolution   Point of final conflict in the plot between the protagonist and antagonist where one emerges as the categorical winner  
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Reversal   Doing or saying the opposite or unexpected  
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Rhyme scheme   Pattern of repetition of rhyme within a Pom designated by aabb or abab, where the letter a marks the first line and all other lines rhyming with it  
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Rising action   Introduction of conflict into the plot bringing tension that continues throughout the story  
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Roman a clef   "Novel with a key" a narrative that depicts historical figures and events in the form of fiction  
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Romance   An aritistic and and literary movement originating in the second half of the eighteenth century in Europe, emphasizing emotion idealism, adventure, and chivalry  
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Sarcasm   Harsh or biting verbal irony  
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Satire   Literary form that ridicules human vices or shortcomings  
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Sestet   Poetic verse of six lines  
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Sestina   Poem of six, six-line stanzas with six end words that are repeated in a closing tercel  
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Setting   The time, place, and circumstances in which a story occurs  
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Simile   Comparison of two unlike I teams using like, as, or as if  
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Slant rhyme   Repetition of final consonants only in two words  
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Sonnet   Specified poetic patter of fourteen lines arranged in a set rhyme scheme  
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Speculative   Writing or discourse that explores ideas  
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Stanza   In poetry a group of lines set off by space also referred to as a verse  
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Static   A character who stays the same throughout a literary work  
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Stereotype   A popularly held belief about as pacific group or type of individuals  
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Stock   A well-understood and accepted interpretation of an image symbol or character.  
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Stricture   Organization of a literary work  
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Style   How an author writes incorporates diction syntax use of narrative and dialogue. Choice point of view and description  
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Symbol   An object, image, word, or feeling that represents something treating  
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Synecdoche   Specific type of metaphor in which a part is used to represent the whole or the whole for a part  
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Syntax   Sentence construction or sentence structure  
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Tercet   Three lines of poetry that form a stanza or a complete poem  
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Tetrameter   A line of four metrical feet  
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Thought   Idea the essayist is conveying  
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Theme   Statement summarizing the message or a complete poem  
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Tone   The attitude toward the subject conveyed by the author  
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Topic   Phrase stating subject or theme of a work or speech  
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Tragic hero   Noble good protagonist in a tragedy who experiences adversity or misfortune  
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Tragic comedy   Fictional work combining characteristics of tragedy and comedy such as a somber play with a happy ending  
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Trimeter   In poetry a line with three metrical feet  
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Trochee   Metrical foot in poetry of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed one  
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Truth   Fact or reality that transcends genres  
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Understatement   Expression of an idea with less force or strength than expected for the sake of humor  
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Verse   A line of poetry often used to refer to a section or stanza of a poem  
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Villanelle   A poem consisting of nineteen lines: five tercets followed by one quatrain  
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Voice   The speaker in nonfiction the author in fiction the narrator may also refer to the style chosen by the writer such as formal or informal  
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The when   Setting of the story within time  
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Then where   Physical setting of the story  
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The who   Characters in the story  
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The why   Theme or main idea of the story  
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The wit   Intellectual humor in poetry with works through word play to emphasize concepts  
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