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Literary Terms

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Terms
Definitions
allegory   a literary work in which all or most of the characters, settings, and events symbolize ideas  
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alliteration   the repetion of consonant sounds at the beginning of words  
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allusion   a reference in a wok of literature to a well-known person, place, event, written work, or work of art  
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analogy   a comparison based on a similarity between things that are otherwise dissimilar  
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assonance   the repetition of the some or similar vowel sounds in stressed syllables that end in different consonant sounds  
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character   a personage in a narrative of drama  
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conflict   the central struggle between two opposing forces in a story or drama  
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denotation   the literal, or dictionary, them meaning of a word  
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dialogue   conversation between characters in a literary work  
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fiction   a narrative in which situations and characters in a literary work  
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foil   a minor character whose attitudes, beliefs, and behavior differ significantly from those of a minor character  
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genre   a category or type of literature  
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hyperbole   a figure of speech that uses exaggeration to express strong emotion, make a oint, or envoke humor  
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irony   a contrast or discrepancy between expectation and reality  
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metaphor   a figure of speech that makes a comparison between two seemingly unlike things to help readers perceive the first thing more vividly and suggest an underlying similarity between the two  
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narrative   writing that tells a story  
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narrator   the person who tells the story  
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personification   a figure of speech in which an animal, object, force of nature, or idea is given human qualities  
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plot   a sequence of events in a narrative work  
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apostrophe   a direct address to someone or something  
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aside   (blank)  
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Monologue   An extended speech by a single character, a solo speech to listeners. (different than solilogy)  
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Moral   a message or lesson implied or directly stated in a literary work.  
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Motif   An element that recurs throughout a narrative, or throughout several works.  
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Motivation   The reasons an author provides for a character's actions. Can either be explicit or or implicit.  
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Onomatopoeia   Literary device that attempts to represent a thing or action by the word that imitates the sound associated with it ex(crash, bang)  
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Persona   Latin word for "mask". A ficticious character the author uses to narrate a story.  
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Simile   Comparison of two things usually joined by like, as, than or a verb such as resembles.  
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Soliloguy   A speech by a character when they are alone on stage. Character says thoughts outloud.  
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Symbol   A person place or thing in a narrative that suggests meanings beyond its literal sense.  
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Synecdoche   The use of a significant part of a thing to stand for the whole of it, such as wheels for car.  
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Tone   The attitude of toward a subject conveyed in a literary work. Can be playful, sarcastic, ironic, sad, solemn, or any other attitude.  
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Understatement   An ironic figure of speech that deliverately describes something in a way that is less than the true case.  
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