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The Giver
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| 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. |