lit midterm vocab Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
Antithesis | A rhetorical opposition or contrast of ideas by means of grammatical arrangement of words, clauses, or sentences. Ex: "They promised freedom but provided slavery" / "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country" |
Aphorism | A short, pithy statement of a generally accepted truth or sentiment. |
Apollonian | In contrast to Dionysian, it refers to the most godlike, noble qualities of human nature and behavior. |
Apostrophe | Speaker addresses a person or thing that is not present. |
Archetype | An abstract or ideal conception of a type; a perfectly typical example; an original model or form. |
Bathos | The use of insincere or overdone sentimentality. "Bad pathos" |
Allegory | A story in which the narrative or characters carry an underlying symbolic, metaphorical, or possibly an ethical meaning. |
Ambiguity | A vagueness of meaning; a conscious lack of clarity meant to evoke multiple meanings of explanation. |
Anachronism | A person, scene, event, or other element of literature that fails to correspond with the time or era in which the work was set. |
Bildungsroman | A German word referring to a novel structured as a series of events that take place as the hero travels in quest of a goal. |
Bombast | Inflated, pretentious language used for trivial subjects. |
Cacophony | Grating, inharmonious sounds. |
Caesura | A pause somewhere in the middle of the verse, often (but not always) marked by punctuation. |
Canon | The works considered most important in national literature or period; works widely read and studied. |
Catharsis | A cleansing of the spirits brought about by the pity and terror of a dramatic tragedy. |
Conceit | A witty or ingenious thought |
Deus ex machina | In literature, the use of an artificial device or gimmick to solve a problem. |
Elegy | Poem that laments on death. |
Enjambment | The use of successive lines without break or punctuation in between them. |
Euphony | Pleasing, harmonious sounds. |
Eponymous | The word for the title character. |
Exegesis | A detailed analysis of a work of literature. |
Explication | The interpretation or analysis of a text. |
Frame | Structure that provides premise or setting for a narrative. |
Hubris | Excessive pride that leads to character's downfall. |
Image | A word or phrase that represents something that can be seen, touched, tasted, smelled, or felt. |
Invective | A direct verbal assault. |
Litotes | A form of understatement in which the negative of the contrary is used to achieve emphasis or intensity. |
Metaphysical poetry | The work of 17th century poets that uses elaborate conceits, is highly intellectual, and expresses the complexities of love and life. |
Metonymy | A figure of speech that uses the name of one thing to represent something else with which it is associated. |
Motif | A phrase, idea, or even that through repetition serves to unify or convey a theme in a work of literature. |
Ode | A lyric poem usually marked by serious, respectful, and exalted feelings toward the subject. |
Synecdoche | A figure of speech in which a art signifies the whole, or the whole signifies the part. Pig skin = football is also applicable. |
Trope | The generic name for a figure of speech such as an image, symbol, simile, and metaphor. |
Verisimilitude | Similar to the truth; the quality of realism that persuades the readers that they are getting a vision of life as it is. |
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