Literary terms
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Apostrophe | - absent/dead spoken to as if present
- inanimate as if animate
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assonance | - repetition of accented vowel sounds
- eg. Cry/ side
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Consonance | - repetition of a consonant sound
- eg. each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds
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Diction | - word choice intended to convey effect
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Figures of speech | - describes one thing in terms of other
- imaginative comparison
- usually simile, metaphor, and personification
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Verbal irony | - speaker or narrator says one thing while meaning the opposite
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Situational irony | - situation turns out differently from what one would expect
- twist often appropriate
- ie. Deep sea diver drowning in bathtub
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Dramatic irony | - character says/does something different than what he/she thinks it means
- audience/ other characters understand full implications of speach
- ex. Oediphus curses murderer not realising that he himself is murderer
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Metaphor | - comparison
- not using like/as
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Motivation | - circumstance or set of circumstance that prompts character to act in certain way
- determines outcome of a situation
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Narration | - telling a story in writing or speaking
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Oxymoron | - form of paradox
- combines opposite pair of opposite terms into a /single/ expression
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Paradox | - elements of a /statement/ contradict
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Prosody | - study of sound and rhythm in poetry
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Pun | - play on words
- words identical or similar in sound but have diff meanings
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Sarcasm | - verbal irony
- person appears to be praising but is actually insulting
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Synecdoche | - part if something> whole ex. all hands on deck
- container> the thing being contained ex. the pot is boiling
- material from which the object> the object its self ex. the quarterback tossed the pig skin
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metonymy | - Part symbolizes whole
ex. White house
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Syntax | - arrangement of words
- order of grammatical elements in sentence
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Theme | - central message of a work
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Subject | - expressed in one or two words
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tone | - speaker's attitude toward a subject, character or audience
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understatement | - opposite of hyperbole
- deliberately represents something as being much less that it really is
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Allegory | - form of story in which the characters represent not only themselves, but also an abstract concept such as greed or jealousy or justice or peace.
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anecdotal evidence | - Support for a thesis
- isolated and individual story
- Science prefers statistical evidence which is gathered over time and occurs in more than one instance and is, therefore, more credible.
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blank verse | - unrhyming poetry w/ regular rhythm.
- Iambic pentameter: a pattern of stressed and unstressed beats that occur five times per line.
- Shakespeare
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colloquialism | - Phrases or words that are used in informal conversational language and that are particular to a region are called colloquialisms.
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denoument | -
Denouement is the set of events that occur after the climax of a plot.
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dicadict | A didactic essay, for example, instructs or teaches what is considered to be morally right or proper behaviour.
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direct presentation | In characterization, direct presentation is the specific labelling of a character traits by the author or narrator.
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eponymous | mething, whether it be a novel or perfume, that has the same name as person, real or fictitious, that is associated with it.
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epigram | inition is that it is a short witty poem and the other definition is that it is a short witty saying.
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