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Literary terms KIND
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Plot | The sequence of events in a story--beginning, Middle and end |
| Expostion | The beginning of the story where the main characters and initial conflicts are introduced. The setting of the story (time, place, weather, culture etc.). |
| Rising Action- | Events that lead up to the climax. They help create tension and suspense and may have more conflicts |
| Climax | The turning point of the story; the moment of tension, emotion, or suspense that determines the resolution. The main conflict is addressed. |
| Falling Action | Eases the tension and shows how the main character resolves the conflict. |
| Resolution | The end of the story where typically the main conflict is resolved. |
| Protagonist- | The central character usually involved in a conflict against the antagonist. May also be known as the hero. |
| Antagonist- | The central character’s opponent (creates the conflict). |
| Theme- | The central idea or message about life that is expressed in the story. |
| Conflict | A problem, fight, or struggle between characters, society, nature, or internally within. |
| Setting | Where and when the story takes place (including the time, place, weather, culture, customs and traditions) |
| Charactors | Dynamic Charactor and Static Charactor |
| Central idea | What the section is mostly about. |
| person vs person | This type of conflict finds the main character in conflict with another character, human or not human. |
| Person vs nature | This type of conflict finds the main character in conflict with the forces of nature, which serve as the antagonist. |
| Person vs. Society: | This type of conflict has the main character in conflict with a larger group: a community, society, culture, school, etc. |
| Person vs. Self: | In this type of conflict, the main character experiences some kind of inner conflict like a making a difficult decision or dealing with a personal problem. |
| Setting | Where and when the story takes place (including the time, place, weather, culture, customs and traditions). - The central character’s opponent (creates the conflict). |
| Protagonist- | The central character is usually involved in a conflict against the antagonist. May also be known as the hero. |
| Climax- | The point of tension, emotion, or heightened suspense (the turning point). Determines the resolution |
| Author’s Purpose- | - The reason why the author writes: Entertain, Inform, Explain, and Persuade |
| Mood- | The feelings the reader gets from reading the author’s words. |
| Tone | The attitudes and feelings of an author/speaker toward a subject. |
| Characterization | means through which an author reveals a character’s personality. Characterization may be direct or indirect. |
| Direct Characterizatio | The author tells the reader what the character is like. |
| Indirect Characterization: | The author shows the reader what the character is like through how a character looks, what the character does, what the character says, what the character thinks, or how the character affects the other characters. |
| Dynamic Character | A character who undergoes a significant internal change throughout the story. This may be a change in understanding, values, insight, etc. |
| Static Character | - A character who does not undergo a significant change throughout a story. |