Literary Terms R-V 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
Term | Meaning |
refrain | A phrase or verse that is repeated throughout a poem or song. |
rhetorical question | A question put forth to achieve an effect or make a point, to which an answer is not expected. |
rhyme | The repetition of similar or identical sounds at the ends of lines of verse. |
rhythm | The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry or prose. |
satire | Ridicule of a subject; the work in which it is contained. |
short story | A brief work of narrative prose. |
simile | The comparison of two unlike objects using “like” or “as”. |
soliloquy | A dramatic monologue meant to convey the thoughts of a character in a play. |
sonnet | A poem consisting of fourteen iambic pentameter lines with a rigidly prescribed rhyming scheme. |
spondee | A type of metrical foot with two stressed syllables. |
spoonerism | The transportation of the initial sounds of two or more words, often with humorous results. Named for a Professor Spooner of Oxford, who was famous for such transpositions. |
style | An author’s individual method and tone. |
subplot | A secondary plot in a story. |
symbol | In literature, something that stands for, or means, something else. |
theme | The central idea or thesis of a work. |
trochee | A metrical foot that contains one long or stressed syllable preceding one short or unstressed syllable. |
verse | Lines of writing arranged in metrical patterns, or a single such line. |
Created by:
daphnecm
Popular Languages sets