L!teraryTermz Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Question | Answer |
Omniscient Point of View | when the narrator knows everything in a piece of literature |
Ambiguity | Words or phrases with more than one meaning |
Synecdoche | When part of something stands for a whole, or a whole stands for a part |
Apostrophe | talking to something or someone that isn't physically there |
Mood | Feeling or emotion that a work of literature evokes |
Theme | A central idea or statement that unifies and controls entire literary work |
Conflict | the struggle within the plot between opposing forces |
Types of conflict | person vs person person vs society person vs nature person vs self person vs faith/God(s) |
Setting | place or type of surrounding where something is positions or where and event takes place |
Theme Statement | turns central meaning of a book into a universal statement |
Litotes | When something is expressed by negating its opposite. (i was not unhappy) |
Allusion | a reference in a book to a person, place, or event |
Paradox | contradictions that make sense on a deeper level |
protagonist | leading character or hero in a story or novel whose conflict sets the plot in motion |
Antagonist | one who opposes another negatively (against the protagonist) |
Point of view | manner of narrator viewing things, attitude, position at which something is observed |
Connotation | multiple meanings a word carries other than its dictionary definition |
Diction | choice of particular words with specific type of tone |
Imagery | text that makes a mental picture using the five senses |
Animal Imagery | how an author compares situations and characters to animals, or gives them animal characteristics |
genre | when literature has a certain category or style |
verbal Irony | use of words that are the opposite of the speakers mind (sarcasm) |
Framing | using features, wording, location, problems or topic at both the begging and end of a story. (story within a story) |
situational irony | accidental events that happen that seem oddly appropriate |
style | writer's creative way determined by choices with diction, figurative language, sounds, rhythmic patterns ect. |
allegory | interaction of multiple symbols which together create a moral, spiritual, or political meaning |
figurative language | relates something unfamiliar to something familiar *similes *metaphors *personification |
oxymoron | two opposing words together (pretty ugly) |
simile | comparison between to unlike things using like, as, or than |
hyperbole | exaggeration to emphasize the truth |
dramatic irony | audience knows the outcome but the character does not |
tone | attitude or expression towards the audience and or subjects |
direct characterization | when the author make specific traits about a character to tell about them |
indirect | the writer reveals information about a character and his personality through that character's thoughts, words, and actions, along with how other characters respond to that character, including what they think and say about him. |
syntax | arrangements of how sentences are made with a word or grammatical change |
antithesis | opposite terms or PHRASES next to each other (it was the best of times , and it was the worst of times) |
First Person point of view | the story through the narrators eyes (I, Me, my) |
soliloquy | spoken in a play when the character believes he/she are alone (thoughts) |
denotation | literal or dictionary meaning of a word |
metaphor | comparison/ analogy without using like or as |
personification | giving inanimate objects human traits |
symbol | an object that represents or stands for something else |
motif | incident, object, or theme, that reoccurs throughout a story and supports the theme |
persona | part of a person's character that is seen by others |
limited 3rd point of view | narrator knows only the thoughts of a single character |
satire | use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, a situation (used for change) |
antithesis | opposite terms or PHRASES next to each other (it was the best of times , and it was the worst of times) |
First Person point of view | the story through the narrators eyes (I, Me, my) |
soliloquy | spoken in a play when the character believes he/she are alone (thoughts) |
denotation | literal or dictionary meaning of a word |
metaphor | comparison/ analogy without using like or as |
personification | giving inanimate objects human traits |
symbol | an object that represents or stands for something else |
motif | incident, object, or theme, that reoccurs throughout a story and supports the theme |
persona | part of a person's character that is seen by others |
limited 3rd point of view | narrator knows only the thoughts of a single character |
satire | use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, a situation (used for change) |
synesthesia | use of one sense to describe another sense (that's a loud red) |
indirect | the writer reveals information about a character and his personality through that character's thoughts, words, and actions, along with how other characters respond to that character, including what they think and say about him. |
syntax | arrangements of how sentences are made with a word or grammatical change |
First Person point of view | the story through the narrators eyes (I, Me, my) |
soliloquy | spoken in a play when the character believes he/she are alone (thoughts) |
denotation | literal or dictionary meaning of a word |
metaphor | comparison/ analogy without using like or as |
personification | giving inanimate objects human traits |
symbol | an object that represents or stands for something else |
motif | incident, object, or theme, that reoccurs throughout a story and supports the theme |
persona | part of a person's character that is seen by others |
limited 3rd point of view | narrator knows only the thoughts of a single character |
satire | use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, a situation (used for change) |
irony | words or phrase opposite of lteral meaning |
juxtaposition | state of bring close together or side by side (opposites) |
Created by:
ladylibra
Popular Reading sets