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Literary terms
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Climax | the most intense, exciting, or important point of something |
| Conflict | a serious disagreement or argument, typically a protracted one. |
| External Conflict | another character or obstacle. |
| Foreshadow | hints or clues the author gives about what will happen in the story. |
| Internal Conflict | occurs within the character’s heart or mind. |
| Mood | how the author makes the reader feel |
| Plot | the series of events in the story. |
| Setting | he when, where, and environment of the story. |
| Tone | how the author feels |
| Allusion | a reference to a well-known person, place, event, or thing. |
| Antagonist | the bad guy and is in direct conflict with the main character. |
| Dialogue | conversation in the story. |
| Direct Characterization | when the author TELLS what the character is like. |
| Dynamic Character | grows or changes as a result of the story |
| Flat Character | only has 1-2 traits revealed to the reader. |
| Indirect Characterization | when the author SHOWS what the character is like. |
| Motivation | what drives the character (fear, needs, wants, etc.). |
| Protagonist | the main character in a story and usually the good guy or hero. |
| Round Character | character is multi-dimensional and many different traits are revealed. |
| Static Character | character does not change as a result of the |
| 1st Person POV | narrator is a character in the story and tells the story using pronouns I, we, me, us, etc |
| 3rd Person Limited POV | narrator plays no role in the story; tells about one character’s thoughts, feelings, and actions. |
| 3rd Person Objective POV | narrator is a spectator of events and reports what is seen or heard; relays little to no thoughts or feelings. |
| 3rd Person Omniscient POV | narrator plays no role in the story, is “God-like” and “All-knowing”; knows all the character’s thoughts, actions, and feelings. |
| Credible | trusted |
| Irony | contrast of what the reader expects and what really happens. |
| Point of View | the vantage point or perspective from which a story is told. |
| Theme | the central idea or insight about human life that a story reveals. |
| Unreliable Narrator | : biased and cannot or does not tell the truth. |
| Character | a person, animal, being, creature, or thing in a story. |
| Characterization | the act of creating and describing characters in literature. |
| Connotation | a feeling or idea that a word has, in addition to its literal or main meaning. |
| Denotation | the objective meaning of a word. |
| Figurative Language | a literary device that uses words or phrases for effect, humorous, or exaggeration purposes, instead of their literal translation. |
| Hyperbole | the use of exaggeration as a rhetorical device or figure of speech. |