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KAP vocab
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Third person limited | a narrative perspective where an outside narrator (using he/she/they) restricts information to the thoughts, feelings, and experiences of one character at a time |
| Third person omniscient | a narrative perspective where an all-knowing, "god-like" narrator tells the story using "he," "she," and "they," without being a character |
| Phrase | a small group of words standing together as a conceptual unit, typically forming a component of a clause. |
| Central Theme | the primary, underlying message, lesson, or "big idea" an author conveys in a literary work, film, or art |
| Revision/Revised | the process of re-examining, amending, or reorganizing content to improve, update, or correct it |
| Formal vs. Informal tone | Formal tone uses precise, standard English, avoids contractions, and maintains an objective, polite, and professional demeanor, ideal for academic or business contexts. an informal tone is conversational, personal, uses contractions, and employs s |
| Objective Summary | a concise, neutral overview of a text, video, or presentation that highlights the main ideas and essential details without including personal opinions, interpretations, or bias |
| Conclution | the final part of a discourse that summarizes key points, reinforces the main idea (like a thesis), provides closure, and offers final thoughts or broader implications, serving as a logical end and lasting impression of the arguments presented |
| Claim or Counterclaim | The claim is the author's argument that they are attempting to prove in the essay. The counterclaim is the opposite argument which the author addresses in order provide a rebuttal |
| Perspective | the capacity to view things in their true relations or relative importance |
| Point of View | the perspective from which something is seen, considered, or told, encompassing a person's opinion or attitude, or the specific narrative stance (like first-person "I", second-person "you", or third-person) used in storytelling |
| Primary purpose | the main reason, intent, or driving force behind an action, policy, or object. |
| Relavent vs. Irrelavent | Relevant costs refer to those that will differ between different alternatives. Irrelevant costs are those that will not cause any difference when choosing one alternative over another. |
| Primary or Primarily | Primary (adjective) means first in time, order, rank, or importance; it represents the fundamental, basic, or direct stage of something. Primarily (adverb) means mainly, chiefly, or for the most part, indicating the principal reason or aspect |
| connotation | an idea or feeling that a word invokes in addition to its literal or primary meaning. |
| emphasis | special importance, value, or prominence given to something. |
| inference | a conclusion reached on the basis of evidence and reasoning. |
| onmition | knowing everything |
| analogy | |
| allusion | |
| antonym | |
| synonym | |
| interrogative | |
| indicative | |
| subjunctive | |
| impeartive | |
| condtional | |
| stanza | |
| transition/transitional phrase |