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Created by babbie
over 11 years ago
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Copied by Ruth Steyert
almost 9 years ago
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| Question | Answer |
| Alliteration | Two or more words that start with the same letter. |
| Assonance | The repetition of vowel sounds. |
| Consonance | The repetition of consonant sounds in the middle or at the end of words |
| Anecdote | A short, interesting or amusing story used to support a point. |
| Imagery | When the writer or speaker uses their descriptions to access the senses of the reader or listener |
| Repetition | When the writer or speaker knowingly repeats a word or group of words for effect |
| Dialect | The language and pronunciation used by people of a certain area/class/group. |
| Archetype | A typical character, action or situation that seems to represent universal patterns of human nature, e.g. the hero, the mother figure, the villain / the journey, the fall, good vs evil / life, death, struggle. |
| Onomatopoeia | Words used to name sounds - e.g. BANG |
| Idiom | An accepted phrase or expression having a meaning different from the literal meaning e.g. 'Raining cats and dogs.' |
| Simile | Describing something by saying it is 'like' or 'as' another thing. |
| Metaphor | Describing something by saying it IS something else. e.g. 'Juliet is the sun...' |
| Hyperbole | Extravagant exaggeration used to emphasise a point, e.g. 'Mile high ice cream.' |
| Personification | Giving human or animal like qualities to inanimate objects. |
| Pathetic fallacy | Giving human qualities to nature/weather, e.g. 'angry skies'. |
| Connotation | A meaning that is implied by a word, other than the literal meaning, e.g. 'Wall Street' connotes wealth. 'Childish' and 'youthful' have the same literal meaning, however childish has a negative connotation relating to immature behaviour and youthful has a positive connotation. |
| Allegory | A story, play, or picture in which characters or settings are used as symbols or abstract ideas. |
| Allusion | A reference to something literary, mythological, or historical that the author assumes the reader will recognise. |
| Verisimilitude | In a literary work, verisimilitude is likeness to the truth i.e. resemblance of a fictitious work to a real event even if it is a far-fetched one. Being able to relate the theme to real life helps make a lasting impression on the reader. |
| Tone | The attitude a writer takes towards a subject, character, or the reader. The overall feeling of a text. |
| Exaggeration | Exaggeration is a statement that makes something better or worse than it actually is. It is used to create extra stress or drama in a piece of work. |
| Diction | A writer's or speaker's choice of words. Synonym - phraseology. |
| Oxymoron | An expression in which two words that contradict each other are joined, e.g. |
| Theme | Theme is defined as a main idea or an underlying meaning of a literary work that may be stated directly or indirectly. Themes can be major (the most significant) or minor (appears briefly and is replaced by another minor theme). |
| Narrative | Narrative is a report of related events presented to the listeners or readers in words arranged in a logical sequence. |
| Climax | The point at which the narrative at which the conflict or tension reaches it's highest point. |
| Protagonist | The central character or leading figure in a story. |
| Colloquial Language | Informal language; language that is conversational/chatty. |
| Euphemism | An indirect, less offensive way of saying something that is considered unpleasant/impolite, e.g. 'pass away' instead of 'die'. |
| Antagonist | A character or group of characters who stand in opposition to the protagonist. |
| Inciting Incident | The inciting incident in a plot is an event or a point that disturbs the actions and life of a protagonist and sets him/her to pursue a mission. It starts the action of a story. |
| Foil | Two characters that highlight each other by their differences. |
| Foreshadowing | The use of hints and clues to suggest what will happen later in a plot. |
| Juxtaposition | Placing two elements side by side to present a comparison or contrast, e.g. 'It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness...' |
| Extended Metaphor | A comparison between two unlike things that continues throughout a series of sentences in a paragraph. |
| Mood | literary element that evokes certain feelings or vibes in readers through words and descriptions. |
| Perspective | A writer may narrate the story from his/her own perspective (third person) , or from the perspective of a character or characters (first person). |
| Paradox | An apparently contradictory statement that actually contains some truth, e.g. 'I am nobody.' |
| Pun | A play on words, often achieved through the use of words with similar sounds but different meanings. |
| Rhetorical Question | A question asked for an effect, e.g. to make the reader think/not actually requiring an answer. |
| Sarcasm | Mocking words intended to amuse or hurt someone. |
| Satire | A literary work that ridicules or criticises a human vice through humour or derision. |
| Symbolism | Use of symbols that stand for or represent something else, e.g. red - love or danger. |
| Understatement | Saying less than one means, for effect. |
| Wit | Intellectually amusing language that surprises and delights. |
| Stream of Conciousness | A style of writing in which the author tries to reproduce the random flow of thoughts in the human mind. |
| Suspense | Suspense is a literary device that authors use to keep their readers’ interest alive throughout the work. It is a feeling of anticipation that something risky or dangerous is about to happen. |
| Epiphany | A moment of sudden realisation or insight. |
| Motif | An image, object or idea that repeats itself throughout a literary work. |
| Atmosphere | The emotional mood created by a literary work. |
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