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Literary Device; jmk Word Scramble

 
 


 

 
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Term Definition
AlliterationThe repition of inital consonant sounds; such as "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers".
AllusionReferences to literary, artistic, scientific, or historical people, places, or things; the storm was small, not like the "Katrina catastrophe" in 2005.
AntithesisA statement in whcih direct opposites are contrasted in the same sentence.
AphorismA brief, sometimes clever saying that expresses a principle, truth or observation about life; such as "The early bird catches the worm:.
ApostropheA literary device in which the speaker directly addresses someone dead, someone missing, an abstract quality, or something non human as if she/he/it were present.
Appositive A clause, set off by commas or a comma and a period , that gives greater detail or a clue to context; such as The boy, with the blue shirt, was not happy and threw a tantrum.
InferenceA conclusion, possibly based on several pieces of evidence; like putting "mental" puzzle pieces together.
AsideIt is a written digression, a time in a novel, when the author steps outside the story, speaking directly to the reader.
Cause and EffectAn organizational pattern in which the author analyzes reasons for a chain of events.
CharacterizationThe process by which the writer reveals the personalities of the people of the work.
Chronological or sequencial orderAn organizational pattern that places the events in the order of occurrence.
Comparison and ContrastOrganizational pattern that shows similarities and/or differences
ConflictThe tension created in the story by the struggle or outcome of the stuggle; one of the narrative devices to address the tone of the passage; the tip of the plot summary web
ContrastA literary technique in which the author examines two opposites.
DidacticA type of writing that is preachy or bossy.
EpigramA brief, clever, and usually memorable statement.
EuphemismThe substitution of a mild or less negative word or phrase for a harsh or blunt one; such as "potty" for toilet and "boogies" for snot
ForeshadoingA literary technique in which the author gives hints about future events.
HyperboleA figure of speech in which the author over exaggerates to accomplish some purpose; a "tragic meal" or a "deadly smell"
ImagerySentences that appeal to the five senses.
JuxtapositionPlacing two items side by side to create a certain effect, reveal an attitude, or accomplish a purpose.
MetaphorA direct comparison in which an unknown item is understood by directly comparing it to a known item; such as, The ship was a "toy" on the stormy sea. Often contains the word "was" or "is".
OxymoronA juxtaposition of two unlike things to create ambiguity through contradiction; such as a "happy funeral".
OnomatopoeiaUsing a word that emits the sound of the word; such as pop, crunch, smash, pow, bing
Parallelism or Parallel structureRecurrent syntactical similarity. In this structural arrangement several parts of a sentence or several sentences are developed and phrased similarly; such as I came, I say, I conquered OR Then God said, Then God said
PersonificationMetaphorically represents an animala or inanimate object as having human attricutes, attributes of form, character feeling, behavior, and so on; such as, The angry ocean swallowed the oceanliner in one gulp.
PunA play on words based upon the multiple meanings of words; such as, "You stink" which could mean 1. untalented or 2. bad odor
Rhetorical questionA literary device in which a question is asked that actually requires no answer; such as, How stupid is that?
SimileAn indirect comparison using like or as. for example, small as a mouse, big as a house,
StereotypesAnything that represents something in a typical way; such as the drunk, the nurse, the cop, the grandmother. A picture of that character pops into your mind.
SatireHumourous writing that comments on flaws, customs, personality, institutions or ideas. For example, "The Simpsons" cartoon constantly satires someone or something.
idiomAn informal word or phrase that is not literal; for example, "beats me" or" keep an eye on him"