Literature LCC WGU 5 Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Question | Answer |
| Allusion | A figure of speech that makes brief reference to a historical or literary figure, even, or object |
| Apostrophe | A figure of speech in which someone (usually but not always absent) some abstract quality, or a nonexistent personage is directly addressed as though present. |
| Characterization | The creation of imaginary persons so that they seem lifelike. |
| Conceit | Originally the term, cognate and almost synonymous with "concept" or "conception" implied something conceived in the mind |
| Connotation | The emotional implications ans associations that words may carry, as distiguished from their denotation meaning |
| Dynamic Character | A character who develops or changes as a result of the action of the plot |
| Denotation | The basic meaning of a word, independent of its emtional coloration or associations |
| Hyperole | Exaggeration |
| Flat Character | E.M. Forster's term for a character constructed around a single idea or quality, such as the humours characters of the 17th centruy stage |
| Locale | The physical setting of some action. It denotes geographical and scenic qualities rather than the less tangible aspects of setting |
| Point of View | The vantage point from which an author presents a story |
| 1st Person Point of View | |
| 2nd Person Point of View | |
| 3rd Person Point of View | |
| 3rd Person Objective Point of View | |
| 3rd Person Limited Point of View | |
| 3rd Person Omniscient Point of View | |
| Paradox | A statement that although seemingly contradictory or absurd may actually be well founded or true |
| Metaphor | an analogy identifying one object with another and ascribing to the first object one or more of the qualities of the second |
| Metonymy | the substitution of the name of an object closely associated with a word for the word itself. |
| Static Character | A character who changes little if at all |
| Symbol | is something that is itself and also stands for something else |
| Setting | the backgroud against which action takes place |
| Stock Character | Conventional character types |
| Simile | A figure in which a similarity between two objects is directly expresed |
| Synecdoche | a troupe in which a part signifies the whole or the whole signifies the part |
| Symbolism | in its broad sense it is the use of one object to represent or suggest another or in literature the serious and extensive use of symbols |
| Personification | a figure that endows animals, ideas, abstractions, and inanimate ofjects with human form; the representing of imaginary creatures or things as having human personalities, intelligence, and emotions |
| Regionalism | fidelity to a particular geographical area |
| Transferred | |
| Theme | A central idea |
| Transferred Epithet | An adjective used to limit a noun that is really does not logically modify (ex "foreign policy is domestic policy, and the "foreign minister" and "foreign office" are not at all foreign) |
| Understatement | A common figure of speech in which the literal sense of what is said falls detectably short of (or "under") the magnitude of what is being talked about |
Created by:
DanceLots
Popular Literature sets