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Literary terms for MCA-II

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A comparison between two UNLIKE things using "like" or "as". "Cheadle is like the wind."   simile  
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A comparison between two UNLIKE things stating one thing is another. "Cheadle is the wind."   metaphor  
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The storyline of a novel, movie, short story. What happens in the story.   plot  
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Clues of what's to come later on in the plot.   foreshadowing  
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The beginning of any story: we learn the setting, characters, and major conflict.   exposition  
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Creating tension and excitement in a story.   suspense  
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The turning point or high emotional connection in any story.   climax  
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A device in which the word itself sounds like the concept it represents, like "buzz" and "ding."   onomatopoeia  
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A device in which an inanimate object is described as if it had human characteristics. "The coffee cup beckoned to me from across the room."   personification  
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Extreme exaggeration, used for effect. "I have a million things to do today."   hyperbole  
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The writer describes events in such a way that the reader can experience them; lots of description and sensory language is used.   imagery  
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Description that appeals to sight, taste, smell, touch, and hearing. "The pudding was like chocolate satin."   sensory language  
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A story; anything written in story form.   narrative  
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Two or more characters speak to each other in a narrative, usually with the use of quotation marks.   dialogue  
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The time and place in which a story takes place (and both parts are required). Ex: 1960s Chicago.   setting  
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How a writer makes characters come alive for the reader; how the reader learns things about the characters (what they say, do, think, how others react, what the author says.) Direct and Indirect.   characterization  
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The part of the story where we get more complications, heading toward the climax.   rising action  
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What is causing the problems for the main character in a story; three basic types, and there can be more than one in a story.   conflict  
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A type of conflict in which the main character is having problems with other characters.   man vs. man  
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A type of conflict in which the main character is having problems with natural events (ex: volcano, earthquake, etc.)   man vs. nature  
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A type of conflict in which the main character is having problems with his own desires or personality (ex: too afraid to join the talent show).   man vs. himself  
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The main character in any story or movie. Can be "good" or "bad."   protagonist  
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The character that crosses the main character in any story.   antagonist  
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A twist in a story; the unexpected happens.   situational irony  
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The reader or audience knows more than a character, creating tension.   dramatic irony  
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Sarcasm; saying the opposite of what you really mean.   verbal irony  
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The patters of rhymes in a poem. (Ex: ABAB, ABCABCDD)   rhyme scheme  
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How the poem is placed on the page; its visual arrangement.   form (of a poem)  
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What happens in the plot as a direct result of the climax.   falling action  
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The ending of a story; things are put in order.   resolution  
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