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The Giver

QuestionAnswer
Characterization The way an author develops and reveals a character’s personality, traits, and motivations through description, dialogue, thoughts, actions, and interactions.
Conflict The struggle between opposing forces that drives the plot. Types: Internal (within a character) and External (between characters or forces).
Foreshadowing A technique that gives hints or clues about events that will occur later in the story.
Imagery Descriptive language that appeals to the five senses to create vivid mental pictures, helping readers visualize, hear, feel, taste, or smell what is being described
Irony Irony is a literary device that involves a contrast between appearance and reality, or between expectation and outcome. In other words, what actually happens—or what is meant. In other words, a contrast between expectation and reality.
Mood The emotional atmosphere created for the reader through setting, tone, and word choice.
Point of view (Third person limited) A perspective where the narrator is outside the story but focuses on the thoughts and feelings of one character.
Symbolism The use of objects, colors, or characters to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Theme The central idea or underlying message of a literary work, often about life or human nature.
Characterization The way an author develops and reveals a character’s personality, traits, and motivations through description, dialogue, thoughts, actions, and interactions.
Conflict The struggle between opposing forces that drives the plot. Types: Internal (within a character) and External (between characters or forces).
Foreshadowing A technique that gives hints or clues about events that will occur later in the story.
Imagery Descriptive language that appeals to the five senses to create vivid mental pictures, helping readers visualize, hear, feel, taste, or smell what is being described
Irony Irony is a literary device that involves a contrast between appearance and reality, or between expectation and outcome. In other words, what actually happens—or what is meant. In other words, a contrast between expectation and reality.
Mood The emotional atmosphere created for the reader through setting, tone, and word choice.
Point of view (Third person limited) A perspective where the narrator is outside the story but focuses on the thoughts and feelings of one character.
Symbolism The use of objects, colors, or characters to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Theme The central idea or underlying message of a literary work, often about life or human nature.
Created by: bs028310
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