Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search.

EOC PRACTICE

AB
plotthe story line
settingtime and place in a story
characterizationpersonality trait of characters
themecentral message of a work
stylewriters way of writing
point of viewperspective from which the story is told (1st, 2nd, 3rd person)
symbolismuses something to represent something else
foreshadowinggiving clues to suggest events that have yet to occur
moodfeeling created (in the reader) by a work
ironycontrast between what is stated and what is meant
satirewriting that ridicules or criticizes individuals, ideas, social convention
similemaking comparisons between two subjects using like or as
metaphorone thing is spoken of as if it were something else
personificationa non-human subject is given human traits
alliterationrepetition of first sound (Peter Piper picked) - repeated at least two times
allusiona reference to a well-known person, place, event, or literary work to make the writing stronger
stanzagroups of lines in a poem - paragraphs, stanzas
rhyme schemethe regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem
imagerydescriptive or figurative language used to create word pictures for the reader
flashbacka section in a literary work that interrupts the chronological order of events to relate an event from an earlier time. (goes back in time)
protagonistthe good main character
antagonistthe bad main character
ALLITERATION"The twisting trout twinkled below."
ALLUSION"He met his Nemesis."
ANTITHESIS"To be or not to be..."
APOSTROPHE"Ah, Muse! Inspire this poor blind poet to glory..."
ASSONANCE"cry" "side" "mine" "type"
CONSONANCE"...a murmuring of immemorial elms..."
HYPERBOLE"...the shot heard 'round the world..."
VERBAL IRONYAs I fell down the stairs headfirst, I heard her say, "Look at that coordination!"
SITUATIONAL IRONYThe cobbler's children go barefoot because they have no shoes.
DRAMATIC IRONYOedipus curses the murderer of Laius, not realizing that he is cursing himself.
METAPHOR"Time is money."
ONOMATOPOEIA"buzz" "bang" "hiss" "splash"
OXYMORON, "sweet sorrow" "cold fire"
PARADOX"Much madness is divinest sense."
PERSONIFICATION"The train wailed in the night."
PUNMercutio with his dying breath: "Look for me tomorrow and you will find me a grave man."
SARCASM"It's easy to quit smoking--I've done it many times."
SIMILE"The warrior fought like a lion."
SYNECDOCHE (METONYMY)"He asked for the 'blue plate special.'"
UNDERSTATEMENT (LITOTES)"I could probably manage to survive ona salary of 2 million dollars a year."
settingtime and place
protagonistmain character with problem
antagonistprotagonist's problem
plotevents in a story
climaxpoint of greatest emotion in story
denouementconclusion,resolution
rising actioncomplications
expositionbeginning of plot
initial incident of conflictnarrative hook
dynamic charactercharacter who changes dramatically
ironyopposite happens of what is expected
punplay on words
allusionmaking reference to another work of art
foreshadowinghints of things to come
flashbackinterrupts chronological plot
static charactercharacter doesn't change
themeauthor's message
moodatmosphere a work creates
toneauthor's attitude
point of view1st, 3rd limited, 3rd omniscient
allusionreference to a person, literary work, or work of art
characterperson or animal that takes part in a literary work
dynamica character who changes
statica character who does not change
dialogueconversation of two
monologueconversation
soliloquylong speech by a character who is alone
plotsequence of events
expositionbackground;intro of characters
climaxpoint of highest interest or suspense
resolutionoutcome, result
flashbackinterruption of action to go to past
ironya contradiction;strange twist
dramatic ironycontradiction between what a character thinks and what the audience knows
symbolan object that has extended meaning
shock of recognitionseeing yourself in a situation or a character
themecentral message, purpose, or concern of a literary work
Personificationgiving an inanimate object human-like characteristics
Similea comparison using "like" or "as"
Metaphormaking a direct comparison
Moodthe feeling or atmosphere that the writer creates for the reader
Themethe main idea in a work of literature
Symbolismwhen something concrete represents an abstract idea
tonethe writer's attitude is revealed through this
plotthe structure of a story
connotationthe implied or suggested meaning of word or phrase apart from the explicit meaning
denotationthe literal meaning or dictionary definition of a word
figurative languagelanguage enriched by word images and figures of speech
literary devicesrhetorical elements used to create a desired mood ortone in a piece of writing
metaphora figure of speech that makes an implied comparison
moodemotional state expressed in a literary work
personificationmetaphorical figure of speech in which the a nunhuman is given human qualities
similea comparison of two dissimilar things, using comparison words
onomatopoeiaa figure of speech in which the sound of a word reflects its sense or meaning
stylean author's distinctive manner of using language that suits his or her ideas and purpose in wriitng
symbola word or set of words that signifies an object or event which itself signifies something else
symbolismthe use of a concrete image to express an emotion or an abstract idea
themea main idea or central idea that may be stated directly or indirectly
tonethe reflections of an author's attitude toward the topic and the audience as suggested by his or her word choices and stylistic effors
voicethe expression of an author's self or identity as relected in sentence construction or word choices
assonancethe repetition of a vowel sound in words
consonancethe repetition of final consonant sounds
alliterationthe repetition of the beginning sounds of two or more neighboring words
hyperbolea figure of speech in which subject exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect
synecdocheA figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole, or vice versa; the specific for the general, or vice versa; or the material for the thing made from it
literarybeing able to communicate effectively by reading and writing
transitivehaving a direct object after the verv used to complete a sentence
intransitivea verb not followed by a direct object
passivewhen the subject receives the action of a verb
ironythe direct opposite of what is said or done
onomatopoeiasounds associated with an object
personificationto give inanimate objects human feelings and attributes
rubricspecific steps to follow for an assignment
thesisa statement or idea
legibleeasy to read
citeto quote someone
copyrightlegal right to exclusive publication
adjectiveword that describes somebody or something.
adverba word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. It tells "how, when, where, why, how often, and how much." There are 4 classifications: time, place, manner, and degree.
adverbial phrasea phrase that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Infinitive or prepositional phrases can be used as adverbial phrases.
clausegroup of related words that has both a subject and a predicate.
editto replace words, phrases, and sentences that sound awkward or confusing and to correct errors in spelling, usage, mechanics and grammar.
fluencyautomatic word recognition, rapid recoding, and checking for meaning.
gerundverb form that ends in -ing and is used as a noun.
grammarthe study of the structure and features of a language.
metaphors"The stream's a snake."
simile"She dances like a princess."
hyperbole"My date last night was the most beautiful girl in the world."
litotesBill Gates is rather well-off
personification"The fog crept in on little cat feet."
allusion"My boyfriend dances like King Kong."
synecdoche"Have you got your wheels, man?"
conceit"My compass love for you is true."
paradox"A little learning is a dangerous thing."
antithesis"Wretches hang that jury-men may dine."
apostrophe"Goodbye, cruel world."
metonymy"The White House has responded to the criticism."
oxymoron"Jumbo shrimp"
parallelism"When I heard the Learn'd Astronomer,/ When the proofs, the figures were ranged before me."
SEMICOLONUSED TO SEPARATE TWO INDEPENDANT CLAUSES THAT ARE RELATED.
PERIODUSED AT THE END OF A SENTENCE
COLONOFTEN USED BEFORE A LIST
QUOTATION MARKSUSED AT THE BEGINNING AND END OF A QUOTE
To avoid confusion, use _____ to separate words and word groups with a series of three or more.COMMAS
Use a comma to separate two ____ when the word and can be inserted between them.HE IS A STRONG, HEALTHY BOY.
Use a comma when an __ adjective is used with other adjectives.LY EXAMPLE. FELIX WAS A LONELY, YOUNG BOY.
Use commas before or surrounding the name or title of a person directly addressed.WILL YOU, JESSE, DO THAT ASSIGNMENT FOR ME?
Use a comma to separate the day of the month from the year and after the year.Kathleen met her husband on December 5, 2003, in Mill Valley, California.
I am, as you have probably noticed, very nervous about this.Use commas to set off expressions that interrupt the flow of the sentence.
If you are not sure about this, let me know now.When starting a sentence with a weak clause, use a comma after it.
If something or someone is sufficiently identified, the description following it is considered nonessential and should be surrounded by commas.Freddy, who has a limp, was in an auto accident.
Use a comma to separate two strong clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction-and, or, but, for, nor.I have painted the entire house, but he is still working on sanding the doors.
Use commas surrounding words such as therefore and however when they are used as interruptors.I would be happy, however, to volunteer for the Red Cross.
Use a semicolon in place of a period to separate two sentences where the conjunction has been left out.Call me tomorrow; I will give you my answer then.
Use the semicolon to separate units of a series when one or more of the units contain commas.This conference has people that have come from Boise, Idaho; Los Angeles, California; and Nashville, Tennessee.
Use the apostrophe with contractions. The apostrophe is always placed at the spot where the letter(s) has been removed.don't, isn't
Use the apostrophe to show possession. Place the apostrophe before the s to show singular possession.one boy's hat
To show plural possession, make the noun plural first. Then immediately use the apostrophe.two boys' hats
nounA word that names a person, place, thing, or idea.
common nounA word that names an ordinary noun.
proper nounA word that names a specific noun.
pronounA word that takes the place of a noun.
adjectiveA word that modifies (describes) a noun or pronoun.
proper adjectiveA word formed from a proper noun.
adverbA word that modifies (describes) a verb, adjective, or adverb.
verbA word that shows action or state of being.
helping verbA word that helps the main verb.
linking verbA word that links the subject to a noun, pronoun, or adjective in the predicate.
prepositionA word that shows the relationship of a noun or pronoun to another word in the sentence.
conjunctionA word that joins words or groups of words.
articleThe adjectives A, AN, THE.
interjectionAn exclamatory word that expresses emotion. It stands alone - away from the rest of the sentence.
adjectiveAnswers the questions: What kind? Which one? How many?
adverbAnswers the questions: How? When? Where? To what degree or extent?
plotthe story line
settingtime and place in a story
characterizationpersonality trait of characters
themecentral message of a work
stylewriters way of writing
point of viewperspective from which the story is told (1st, 2nd, 3rd person)
symbolismuses something to represent something else
foreshadowinggiving clues to suggest events that have yet to occur
moodfeeling created (in the reader) by a work
ironycontrast between what is stated and what is meant
satirewriting that ridicules or criticizes individuals, ideas, social convention
similemaking comparisons between two subjects using like or as
metaphorone thing is spoken of as if it were something else
personificationa non-human subject is given human traits
alliterationrepetition of first sound (Peter Piper picked) - repeated at least two times
allusiona reference to a well-known person, place, event, or literary work to make the writing stronger
inferencea guess of what can be
stanzagroups of lines in a poem - paragraphs, stanzas
rhyme schemethe regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem
imagerydescriptive or figurative language used to create word pictures for the reader
flashbacka section in a literary work that interrupts the chronological order of events to relate an event from an earlier time. (goes back in time)
protagonistthe good main character
antagonistthe bad main character
dynamic characterthe character that changes (Scrooge)
static characterthe character that does not change
settingtime and place
protagonistmain character with problem
antagonistprotagonist's problem
plotevents in a story
climaxpoint of greatest emotion in story
denouementconclusion,resolution
rising actioncomplications
expositionbeginning of plot
ironyopposite happens of what is expected
punplay on words
allusionmaking reference to another work of art
flashbackinterrupts chronological plot
toneauthor's attitude
allusionreference to a person, literary work, or work of art
dialogueconversation of two
monologueconversation
soliloquylong speech by a character who is alone
dramatic ironycontradiction between what a character thinks and what the audience knows
symbolan object that has extended meaning
themecentral message, purpose, or concern of a literary work
Personificationgiving an inanimate object human-like characteristics
Similea comparison using "like" or "as"
connotationthe implied or suggested meaning of word or phrase apart from the explicit meaning
denotationthe literal meaning or dictionary definition of a word
figurative languagelanguage enriched by word images and figures of speech
metaphora figure of speech that makes an implied comparison
moodemotional state expressed in a literary work
onomatopoeiaa figure of speech in which the sound of a word reflects its sense or meaning
stylean author's distinctive manner of using language that suits his or her ideas and purpose in wriitng
symbola word or set of words that signifies an object or event which itself signifies something else
symbolismthe use of a concrete image to express an emotion or an abstract idea
themea main idea or central idea that may be stated directly or indirectly
assonancethe repetition of a vowel sound in words
consonancethe repetition of final consonant sounds
alliterationthe repetition of the beginning sounds of two or more neighboring words
hyperbolea figure of speech in which subject exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect
synecdocheA figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole, or vice versa; the specific for the general, or vice versa; or the material for the thing made from it
septemberSeptember
is notisn't
do notdon't
is notisn't
are notaren't
did notdidn't
have nothaven't
will notwon't
should notshouldn't
could notcouldn't
I willI'll
we havewe've
you willyou'll
you areyou're
they havethey've
she willshe'll
we arewe're
you haveyou've
let uslet's
he ishe's
I amI'm
metaphors"The stream's a snake."
simile"She dances like a princess."
hyperbole"My date last night was the most beautiful girl in the world."
personification"The fog crept in on little cat feet."
allusion"My boyfriend dances like King Kong."
synecdoche"Have you got your wheels, man?"
paradox"A little learning is a dangerous thing."
apostrophe"Goodbye, cruel world."
metonymy"The White House has responded to the criticism."
oxymoron"Jumbo shrimp"
parallelism"When I heard the Learn'd Astronomer,/ When the proofs, the figures were ranged before me."
simileA comparison between two distinctly different things, using the word "like" or "as"
personificationA figure of speech where animals, ideas or objects are given human characteristics
fictionA literary work whose content is produced by the imagination and is not necessarily based on fact
symbolA person, place, thing, or an event that has meaning in itself and stands for something beyond itself as well; it can signify something else
ironyA term that suggests some sort of discrepancy between appearance and reality; says one thing and means another
biographyAn account of a person’s life written or told by another person
metaphorAn imaginative comparison between two unlike things in which one thing is said to be another thing
hyperboleAn overstatement or exaggeration
dialogueConversation between characters in a drama or narrative
science fictionFiction that deals with the influence of real or imagined science on society or individuals; many of the events recounted are within the realm of future possibility
fantasyImaginative fiction featuring esp. strange settings and grotesque characters; things happen that can not happen in real life
flashbackInterruption in the present action of the plot to show events that happened at an earlier time
point of viewThe angle or perspective from which a story is told
autobiographyThe angle or perspective from which a story is told
antagonistThe character that contends with or opposes another character
plotThe events or main story in a literary work
themeThe general idea or insight about life that a work of literature reveals
foreshadowingThe introduction of clues early in a story to suggest or anticipate significant events that will develop later
resolutionThe last part of the story when the characters’ problems are solved and the story ends
charactersThe people or animals in a work of fiction or drama
narratorThe person who tells the story
climaxThe point of highest dramatic tension or a major turning point in the action; the most emotional or suspenseful moment in story
protagonistThe main character in a literary work
alliterationThe repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of words
conflictThe struggle between persons or forces in a work of drama or fiction
settingThe time and place in which the events of a work of literature take place
dialectThe way of speaking that is characteristic of a certain geographical area or a certain group of people
nonfictionWriting that deals with real people, things, events, or places
ALLITERATION"The twisting trout twinkled below."
ALLUSION"He met his Nemesis."
ANTITHESIS"To be or not to be..."
APOSTROPHE"Ah, Muse! Inspire this poor blind poet to glory..."
ASSONANCE"cry" "side" "mine" "type"
CONSONANCE"...a murmuring of immemorial elms..."
HYPERBOLE"...the shot heard 'round the world..."
VERBAL IRONYAs I fell down the stairs headfirst, I heard her say, "Look at that coordination!"
SITUATIONAL IRONYThe cobbler's children go barefoot because they have no shoes.
DRAMATIC IRONYOedipus curses the murderer of Laius, not realizing that he is cursing himself.
METAPHOR"Time is money."
ONOMATOPOEIA"buzz" "bang" "hiss" "splash"
OXYMORON"sweet sorrow" "cold fire"
PARADOX"Much madness is divinest sense."
PERSONIFICATION"The train wailed in the night."
PUNMercutio with his dying breath: "Look for me tomorrow and you will find me a grave man."
SARCASM"It's easy to quit smoking--I've done it many times."
SIMILE"The warrior fought like a lion."
SYNECDOCHE (METONYMY)"He asked for the 'blue plate special.'"
UNDERSTATEMENT (LITOTES)"I could probably manage to survive ona salary of 2 million dollars a year."
allusionreference to a person, literary work, or work of art
characterperson or animal that takes part in a literary work
dynamica character who changes
statica character who does not change
dialogueconversation of two
monologueconversation
soliloquylong speech by a character who is alone
plotsequence of events
expositionbackground;intro of characters
climaxpoint of highest interest or suspense
resolutionoutcome, result
flashbackinterruption of action to go to past
ironya contradiction;strange twist
dramatic ironycontradiction between what a character thinks and what the audience knows
symbolan object that has extended meaning
shock of recognitionseeing yourself in a situation or a character
themecentral message, purpose, or concern of a literary work
Personificationgiving an inanimate object human-like characteristics
Similea comparison using "like" or "as"
Metaphormaking a direct comparison
Moodthe feeling or atmosphere that the writer creates for the reader
Themethe main idea in a work of literature
Symbolismwhen something concrete represents an abstract idea
tonethe writer's attitude is revealed through this
plotthe structure of a story
Alliterationrepetition of initial consonant sounds
Allusionreference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art.
Anecdotea brief story about an interesting, amusing, or strange event
anticlimaxturning point in a story (always a let down)
asidea short speech delivered by an actor in a play, expressing a character's thoughts
assonancerepetition of vowel sounds followed by different consonants in two or more stressed syllables
autobiographyform on nonfiction in which a person tells his or her own life story
biographyform on nonfiction in which a writer tellst he life story of another person
blank versepoetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter lines
charactera person or an animal who takes part in the action of a literary work
characterizationthe act of creating and developing a character
direct characterizationthe author directly states a character's traits
indirect characterizationan author tells what a character looks like, does, and says, and how other characters react to him
round charactershows many different traits--faults as well as virtues
flat characterwe see only one side of a character
dynamic characterdevelops and grows during the course of the story
static characterdoes not change or grow
climaxthe high point of interest or supsense in a story, novel, or play
conflicta sturggle between opposing forces
external conflictmain character struggles against and outside force
internal conflictinvolves a character in conflict with himself or herself
connotationthe set of ideas associeated with a word in addition to its explicit meaning
coupleta pair of rhyming lines usually of the sme lenght and meter
denotationa words dictionary meaning, independent of other associations that the word may have
dialcectfrom of language spoken by people in a particular region or group
dialoguea conversaation between characters
dictionword choice
dramaa story written to be performed by actors
dramatic poetrypoetry that utilizes the techniques of drama
epica long narrative poem about the deeds of gods or heroes
epic simile (Homeric simile)an elaborate comparison of unlike subjects
essaya short nongiction work about a particular subject
expositionthe part of the work that introduces the cahracters, the setting, and the basic situation
fantasya highly imaginative writing that contains elements not found in real life
fictionprose writing that tells about imagninary charactes and events
figurative languagewriting or speech not meant to be interpreted literally
foreshadowingthe use in a literary work of clues that suggest events that have yet to occur
free versepoetry not written in a regular rhythmical pattern, or meter
genrecategory or type of literature
haikua three-line verse form. 5-7-5 syllables
imagea word or phrase that appeals to one or more of the five senses
imagerythe descriptive or figurative language used in literature to create word pictures for the reader
verbal ironywords are used to suggest the opposite of what is meant
dramatic ironythere is a contradiction between what a character thinks and what the reader or audience knows to be true
irony of situationan event occurs that directly contradicts the expectations of the characters
lyric poema highly musical verse that expresses the observations and feelings of a single speaker
metaphora figure of speech in which one thing is spoken of as though it were something else
metera poem's rhythmical patter
monologuea speech by one character in a play, story, or poem
moodthe feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage
morala lesson taught by a literary work
motivationa reason that explains or partially explains why a character thinks, feels, acts, or behaves in a certain way
mytha fictional tale that explains the actions of gods or the causes of natural phenomena
narrationwriting that tells a story
narrativea story told in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or drama
narrative poema poem that tells a story
narratora speaker or character who tells a story
nonfictionprose writing that presents and explains ideas or that tells about real people, places, objects, or events
novela long work of fiction
onomatopoeiathe use of words that imitate sounds
oral traditionpassing of songs, stories, and poems from generation to generation by word of mouth
personificationa type of figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics
persuasionwriting or speech that attempts to convice the reader to adopt a particular opinion or course of action
plotthe sequence of events in a literary work
poetryone of the three major types of literature, the others being prose and drama
prosethe ordinary form of written language
quatraina stanza or poem made up of four lines, usually with a definite rhythm and rhyme scheme
repetitionthe use of any element of language--a sound, a word, a phrase, a clause, or a sentence--more than once
rhymethe repetition of sounds at the ends of words
rhyme schemea regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem
rhythmthe patter of beats, or stresses, in spoken or written language
science fictionwriting that tells about imagninary events that involve science or technology
settingthe timeand place of the action
short storya brief work of fiction
similea figure of speech in which like or as is used to make a comparison between two basically unlike ideas
soliloquya long speech expressing the thoughts of a character alone on stage
sonneta fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in rhymed iambic pentameter
speakerthe imaginary voice assumed by the writer of a poem
stage directionsnotes included in a drama to describe how the work is to be performed or staged
stanzaa formal division of lines ina poem, considered as a unit
suspensea feeling of curiosity or uncertainty about eh outcome of events in a literary work
symbolanything that stands for or represents something else
themea central message or insight into life revealed through the literary work
tonethe writer's attitude toward his or her audience and subject of a literary work
tragedya work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe for the main character
Nounsname persons, places, things, or ideas
Pronounstake the place of nouns
Adjectivesdescribe or modify nouns or pronouns
Verbsexpress action or being
Adverbsdescribe or modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs
Conjunctionsjoin words or groups of words
Prepositionsrelate nouns or pronouns to other words in a sentences
Interjectionsexpress emotion or feeling
proper nounHarry Potter
adjectivescary
adverbsuddenly
common nounhomework
helping verbwould
pronounit
proper adjectiveAustralian
action verbleap
prepositionin
conjunctionand
interjectionwow
article/adjectivethe
Narrative PoemA verse that tells a story
Dramatic PoemA verse that relies heavily on dramatic elements such as monologue or dialogue
SonnetA fourteen line poem that follows one of a number of different rhyme themes
OdeA lofty lyric poem on a serious theme
MonologueOne person speaking
DialogueMore than one person speaking
Free VersePoetry that avoids use of regular rhyme, rhythm, meter, or division into stanzas
Lyric PoemA highly musical verse that expresses the emotions of a speaker
StanzaA group of lines in a poem
End RhymeRhyming words at the end of lines
Internal RhymeRhyming words within lines
Slant RhymeHalf rhyme, near rhyme, or off rhyme is the substitution of assonance or consonance for true rhyme
AlliterationThe repetition of initial consonant sounds
ConsonanceA kind of slant rhyme in which the ending consonant sounds of two words match, but the preceding vowel sound does not
AssonanceThe repetition of vowel sounds in stressed syllables that end with different consonant sounds
OnomatopoeiaThe use of words or phrases that sound like the things to which they refer (ex: click, snap, and pow)
MetaphorA figure of speech in which one thing is spoken or written about as if it were another
SimileA comparison using like or as
CoupletTwo lines
OctaveEight lines
tercetThree lines
QuatrainFour lines
QuintainFive lines
SestetSix lines
HeptastichSeven lines
RhythmThe pattern of beats or stresses in a line of verse or prose
ProseBroad term used to describe all writing that is not drama or poetry
connotationthe implied or suggested meaning of word or phrase apart from the explicit meaning
denotationthe literal meaning or dictionary definition of a word
figurative languagelanguage enriched by word images and figures of speech
literary devicesrhetorical elements used to create a desired mood ortone in a piece of writing
metaphora figure of speech that makes an implied comparison
moodemotional state expressed in a literary work
personificationmetaphorical figure of speech in which the a nunhuman is given human qualities
similea comparison of two dissimilar things, using comparison words
onomatopoeiaa figure of speech in which the sound of a word reflects its sense or meaning
stylean author's distinctive manner of using language that suits his or her ideas and purpose in wriitng
symbola word or set of words that signifies an object or event which itself signifies something else
symbolismthe use of a concrete image to express an emotion or an abstract idea
themea main idea or central idea that may be stated directly or indirectly
tonethe reflections of an author's attitude toward the topic and the audience as suggested by his or her word choices and stylistic effors
voicethe expression of an author's self or identity as relected in sentence construction or word choices
assonancethe repetition of a vowel sound in words
consonancethe repetition of final consonant sounds
alliterationthe repetition of the beginning sounds of two or more neighboring words
hyperbolea figure of speech in which subject exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect
synecdocheA figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole, or vice versa; the specific for the general, or vice versa; or the material for the thing made from it
sitto rest in an upright, sitting position
setto put or place (something)
lieto rest in a reclining position
laylike set; it means to put something down
riseto go up or to get up
raiseto lift up or to cause to go up
satpast tense of sit
setpast tense of set
laypast tense of lie
laidpast tense of lay
rosepast tense of rise
raisedpast tense of raise
have lainpast participle of lie
have laidpast particple of lay
have risenpast particple of rise
have raisedpast particple of raise
. full stopto end a sentence
, commato make smaller breaks within a sentence, e.g after a clause or a joining word
! exclamation markto indicate strong feelings, e.g. surprise, anger, indignation
? question markto end a question
; semi-colonto make a break in a long sentence, which is longer than a comma and shorter than a full stop
: colonbefore a list
- dashto quickly add extra information which is not relevant to the rest of the sentence
( ) close bracketsto quickly add extra information which is not relevant to the rest of the sentence
- hyphento join two words to make a new word
's apostrophe 'S'to show that something belongs to somebody or to show 2 words have been put together
... dot dot dotto show something is unfinished
' ' inverted commasto show something is being referred to by a strange name
" " speech marke, or quotation marksto show which words were spoken
underlinefor titles or sub-headings
adjectiveexhausted
conjunctionbecause
nounstudents
pronounthey
exhaustedadjective
verbsnored
adverbloudly
articleThe
prepositionduring
object of prepositionclass
phrasal (verb + prepositon)stayed up
adverblate
participle/gerunddrinking
possessive pronountheir
noun used as adjectivebeer
nounmilkshakes
adjective (from proper noun)English
main verbsnored
noun- subject of sentencestudents
adverb phrase (when)the night before
semicolonused like a period
apostropheused to show possession
colonused before a list
alliterationpink panther
assonancehow now
simileYou are as angry as a bee.
onomatopoeiaThe crackling fire was cozy.
metaphorYou are the sunshine of my life.
plotthe story line
settingtime and place in a story
characterizationpersonality trait of characters
themecentral message of a work
stylewriters way of writing
point of viewperspective from which the story is told (1st, 2nd, 3rd person)
symbolismuses something to represent something else
foreshadowinggiving clues to suggest events that have yet to occur
moodfeeling created (in the reader) by a work
ironycontrast between what is stated and what is meant
personificationa non-human subject is given human traits
allusiona reference to a well-known person, place, event, or literary work to make the writing stronger
stanzagroups of lines in a poem - paragraphs, stanzas
imagerydescriptive or figurative language used to create word pictures for the reader
flashbacka section in a literary work that interrupts the chronological order of events to relate an event from an earlier time. (goes back in time)
protagonistthe good main character
antagonistthe bad main character
passivewhen the subject receives the action of a verb
adjectiveword that describes somebody or something.
adverba word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. It tells "how, when, where, why, how often, and how much." There are 4 classifications: time, place, manner, and degree.
clausegroup of related words that has both a subject and a predicate.
gerundverb form that ends in -ing and is used as a noun.
hyperbole"My date last night was the most beautiful girl in the world."
oxymoron"Jumbo shrimp"
fictionA literary work whose content is produced by the imagination and is not necessarily based on fact
symbolA person, place, thing, or an event that has meaning in itself and stands for something beyond itself as well; it can signify something else
biographyAn account of a person’s life written or told by another person
dialogueConversation between characters in a drama or narrative
science fictionFiction that deals with the influence of real or imagined science on society or individuals; many of the events recounted are within the realm of future possibility
fantasyImaginative fiction featuring esp. strange settings and grotesque characters; things happen that can not happen in real life
autobiographyThe angle or perspective from which a story is told
antagonistThe character that contends with or opposes another character
themeThe general idea or insight about life that a work of literature reveals
foreshadowingThe introduction of clues early in a story to suggest or anticipate significant events that will develop later
resolutionThe last part of the story when the characters’ problems are solved and the story ends
narratorThe person who tells the story
climaxThe point of highest dramatic tension or a major turning point in the action; the most emotional or suspenseful moment in story
protagonistThe main character in a literary work
conflictThe struggle between persons or forces in a work of drama or fiction
dialectThe way of speaking that is characteristic of a certain geographical area or a certain group of people
nonfictionWriting that deals with real people, things, events, or places
dynamica character who changes
statica character who does not change
soliloquylong speech by a character who is alone
plotsequence of events
expositionbackground;intro of characters
resolutionoutcome, result
speech delivered by a character who is alone onstagesoliloquy
a type of story that portrays the fall of a noble personusually due to a tragic weakness or flaw in his/her charactertragedy
the protagonist in a tragedy who suffers a downfall due to a fatal flawtragic hero
a speech or performance given entirely by one person or one charactermonologue
a metrical pattern of unstressed and stressed syllables common in poetry and in Shakespearean plays. contains 10 syllable per lineiambic pentameter
literature meant to be performed onstagedrama
a lighter form of drama; the purpose is to amuse and it usually has a happy endingcomedy
a play on wordpuns
a fourteen line poem written in iambic pentametersonnet
an essential element of Greek dramas; a group of people who speak in a collective voice often restating the action of the playchorus
The sequence of events in a storyplot
Poems that tell a storynarrative poems
A story that involves the reader in guessing who committed the crime or deedmystery
Prose that explains ideas or is about real eventsnonfiction
A story about a person written by that personautobiography
An author's account or story of another person's lifebiography
A Japanese form of poetry with three lines of 17 syllableshaiku
Poetry that expresses the observations and feelings of a single speakerlyric
when character gets what he deservespoetic justice
The part of the story that grabs the reader's attentionnarrative hook
High point in a story; the point of no returnclimax
The part of a story or play that explains the background or makes conflict clearexposition
The action that takes place in the story after the climaxfalling action
repetition of the beginning consonant soundalliteration
the speaker or writer's attitude toward the subject of the worktone
a long narrative poem about the adventures of an almost superhuman heroepic
reference to something outside of the workallusion
when a character has a problem with an element of societyperson vs. society
a word or phrase used in place of a person's name to help characterize that personepithet
prose writing that tells about imaginary characters and eventsfiction
a person or thing who opposes the protagonistantagonist
the writer says one thing and means anotherverbal irony
when a story's sequence is interrupted and a character goes back to an earlier timeflashback
repetition of the internal vowel soundassonance
when a character struggles against some outside forceexternal conflict
conflict that exists within a characterinternal conflict
the use of clues that suggest events yet to comeforeshadowing
the way an author reveals his characterscharacterization
a French word meaning form or typegenre
the repetition of consonant sounds inside words or at the ends of wordsconsonance
a word or phrase that is overusedcliche
the feeling a work of literature evokes in the readermood
a character whose actions are inspiring or noble and who overcomes difficultyhero
all the emotions or feelings a word arousesconnotation
a character who stays the samestatic character
a recurring and familiar pattern in literature like a journey or a wise old manarchetype
the dictionary definition of a wordimagery
when something is different than it is supposed to be or thought to beirony
comparison of two unlike things without using like or asmetaphor
time and place of a literary worksetting
a comparison of two unlike things using the words like or assimile
an author's unique way of writing that involves word choice and sentence patternsstyle
central truth or ideatheme
a fictional tale that explains the actions or gods or heroesmyth
words that imitate soundsonmatopoeia
A conversation between at least two charactersdialogue
Instructions for staging a playstage directions
In the middle of thingsin medias res
When a characters words are heard by the audience but not by the other characters onstageaside
An author's assumed or fake namepseudonym
An almost superhuman character that represents the values of an entire nation or culture--He is also cleverstrong and brave.
An extended comparison that compares a heroic event to some everyday occurrence using the words like or asepic simile
Lovely lilting lines of like letters.alliteration
An extreme exaggerationhyperbole
Jumbo shrimpoxymoron
She is the star in my sky.alliteration and metaphor
When a character struggles with another character.person vs. person conflict
The trees whispered in the breeze.assonance and personification
The perspective from which a story is toldpoint of view
When the story is told from the perspective of someone outside of the events of the story but who reveals only one character's thoughtsthird person
When the story is told from the perspective of someone outside of the events by who knows and reveals all the character's thoughts and feelingsomniscient
a character with only one personality traitflat character
poem which tells the story of a person from the past and is often set to musicballas
a character who changesdynamic character
a character with more than one personality traitround character
a statement that seems to be contradictory but actually presents a truthparadox
rhyming words that appear at the ends of two or more lines of poetryend rhyme
stories that center upon or incorporate some historical eventhistorical fiction
Metaphorcreation of an image with no like or as
Similecreation of an image with like or as
Apostrophedirect address of person or thing
Alliterationrepetition of consonants
Assonancerhyming or harmony of vowels
Onomatopoeiause of words or sounds to imitate sound effects
Climaxhigh point
Punsplay on words
Personificationgive inanimate object human characteristics
Hyperboleexaggeration
Ironyuse of a word to convey opposite meaning
Oxymorona linking of an adjective and noun which contradict each other
Paradoxa contradictory situation
metaphors"The stream's a snake."
simile"She dances like a princess."
hyperbole"My date last night was the most beautiful girl in the world."
personification"The fog crept in on little cat feet."
allusion"My boyfriend dances like King Kong."
paradox"A little learning is a dangerous thing."
apostrophe"Goodbye, cruel world."
oxymoron"Jumbo shrimp"
parallelism"When I heard the Learn'd Astronomer,/ When the proofs, the figures were ranged before me."
ALLITERATION"The twisting trout twinkled below."
ALLUSION"He met his Nemesis."
APOSTROPHE"Ah, Muse! Inspire this poor blind poet to glory..."
ASSONANCE"cry" "side" "mine" "type"
CONSONANCE"...a murmuring of immemorial elms..."
HYPERBOLE"...the shot heard 'round the world..."
VERBAL IRONYAs I fell down the stairs headfirst, I heard her say, "Look at that coordination!"
SITUATIONAL IRONYThe cobbler's children go barefoot because they have no shoes.
DRAMATIC IRONYOedipus curses the murderer of Laius, not realizing that he is cursing himself.
METAPHOR"Time is money."
ONOMATOPOEIA"buzz" "bang" "hiss" "splash"
OXYMORON"sweet sorrow" "cold fire"
PARADOX"Much madness is divinest sense."
PERSONIFICATION"The train wailed in the night."
PUNMercutio with his dying breath: "Look for me tomorrow and you will find me a grave man."
SARCASM"It's easy to quit smoking--I've done it many times."
SIMILE"The warrior fought like a lion."
simileA comparison between two distinctly different things, using the word "like" or "as"
personificationA figure of speech where animals, ideas or objects are given human characteristics
fictionA literary work whose content is produced by the imagination and is not necessarily based on fact
symbolA person, place, thing, or an event that has meaning in itself and stands for something beyond itself as well; it can signify something else
ironyA term that suggests some sort of discrepancy between appearance and reality; says one thing and means another
biographyAn account of a person’s life written or told by another person
metaphorAn imaginative comparison between two unlike things in which one thing is said to be another thing
hyperboleAn overstatement or exaggeration
dialogueConversation between characters in a drama or narrative
science fictionFiction that deals with the influence of real or imagined science on society or individuals; many of the events recounted are within the realm of future possibility
fantasyImaginative fiction featuring esp. strange settings and grotesque characters; things happen that can not happen in real life
flashbackInterruption in the present action of the plot to show events that happened at an earlier time
point of viewThe angle or perspective from which a story is told
autobiographyThe angle or perspective from which a story is told
antagonistThe character that contends with or opposes another character
plotThe events or main story in a literary work
themeThe general idea or insight about life that a work of literature reveals
foreshadowingThe introduction of clues early in a story to suggest or anticipate significant events that will develop later
resolutionThe last part of the story when the characters’ problems are solved and the story ends
charactersThe people or animals in a work of fiction or drama
narratorThe person who tells the story
climaxThe point of highest dramatic tension or a major turning point in the action; the most emotional or suspenseful moment in story
protagonistThe main character in a literary work
alliterationThe repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of words
conflictThe struggle between persons or forces in a work of drama or fiction
settingThe time and place in which the events of a work of literature take place
dialectThe way of speaking that is characteristic of a certain geographical area or a certain group of people
nonfictionWriting that deals with real people, things, events, or places
Personificationgiving an inanimate object human-like characteristics
Similea comparison using "like" or "as"
Metaphormaking a direct comparison
Moodthe feeling or atmosphere that the writer creates for the reader
Themethe main idea in a work of literature
Symbolismwhen something concrete represents an abstract idea
tonethe writer's attitude is revealed through this
plotthe structure of a story
asidea short speech delivered by an actor in a play, expressing a character's thoughts
assonancerepetition of vowel sounds followed by different consonants in two or more stressed syllables
autobiographyform on nonfiction in which a person tells his or her own life story
blank versepoetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter lines
charactera person or an animal who takes part in the action of a literary work
characterizationthe act of creating and developing a character
direct characterizationthe author directly states a character's traits
indirect characterizationan author tells what a character looks like, does, and says, and how other characters react to him
round charactershows many different traits--faults as well as virtues
flat characterwe see only one side of a character
dynamic characterdevelops and grows during the course of the story
static characterdoes not change or grow
climaxthe high point of interest or supsense in a story, novel, or play
conflicta sturggle between opposing forces
external conflictmain character struggles against and outside force
internal conflictinvolves a character in conflict with himself or herself
connotationthe set of ideas associeated with a word in addition to its explicit meaning
coupleta pair of rhyming lines usually of the sme lenght and meter
denotationa words dictionary meaning, independent of other associations that the word may have
dialcectfrom of language spoken by people in a particular region or group
dialoguea conversaation between characters
dictionword choice
dramaa story written to be performed by actors
dramatic poetrypoetry that utilizes the techniques of drama
epica long narrative poem about the deeds of gods or heroes
epic simile (Homeric simile)an elaborate comparison of unlike subjects
essaya short nonfiction work about a particular subject
expositionthe part of the work that introduces the cahracters, the setting, and the basic situation
fantasya highly imaginative writing that contains elements not found in real life
fictionprose writing that tells about imagninary charactes and events
figurative languagewriting or speech not meant to be interpreted literally
foreshadowingthe use in a literary work of clues that suggest events that have yet to occur
free versepoetry not written in a regular rhythmical pattern, or meter
genrecategory or type of literature
haikua three-line verse form. 5-7-5 syllables
imagea word or phrase that appeals to one or more of the five senses
imagerythe descriptive or figurative language used in literature to create word pictures for the reader
verbal ironywords are used to suggest the opposite of what is meant
dramatic ironythere is a contradiction between what a character thinks and what the reader or audience knows to be true
irony of situationan event occurs that directly contradicts the expectations of the characters
lyric poema highly musical verse that expresses the observations and feelings of a single speaker
metaphora figure of speech in which one thing is spoken of as though it were something else
metera poem's rhythmical patter
monologuea speech by one character in a play, story, or poem
moodthe feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage
mytha fictional tale that explains the actions of gods or the causes of natural phenomena
narrationwriting that tells a story
narrativea story told in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or drama
narrative poema poem that tells a story
narratora speaker or character who tells a story
nonfictionprose writing that presents and explains ideas or that tells about real people, places, objects, or events
novela long work of fiction
onomatopoeiathe use of words that imitate sounds
personificationa type of figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics
persuasionwriting or speech that attempts to convice the reader to adopt a particular opinion or course of action
plotthe sequence of events in a literary work
poetryone of the three major types of literature, the others being prose and drama
prosethe ordinary form of written language
quatraina stanza or poem made up of four lines, usually with a definite rhythm and rhyme scheme
repetitionthe use of any element of language--a sound, a word, a phrase, a clause, or a sentence--more than once
rhymethe repetition of sounds at the ends of words
rhyme schemea regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem
rhythmthe patter of beats, or stresses, in spoken or written language
science fictionwriting that tells about imagninary events that involve science or technology
settingthe timeand place of the action
short storya brief work of fiction
similea figure of speech in which like or as is used to make a comparison between two basically unlike ideas
soliloquya long speech expressing the thoughts of a character alone on stage
sonneta fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in rhymed iambic pentameter
tonethe writer's attitude toward his or her audience and subject of a literary work
tragedya work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe for the main character
exaggerationstretching of the truth
action verba word that shows action
adjectivedescribes a noun or a pronoun
adverbdescribes a verb, an adjective or another adverb
anecdotea short story about someone
antonymsopposite words
charactera person, animal, or creature in a story
conjunctiona word that joins other words
context cluehelps a reader find the meaning of an unkown word
future tenseshows an action that will happen in the future
haikua Japanese verse form
interjectionexpresses strong feeling or emotion
interrogative sentenceasks a question
linking verbconnects the subject and the predicate
main verbmost important word in the predicate
metaphorcompares two things by saying one thing is the other
nouna person, a place, a thing or an idea
part of speechtells how a word is used in a sentence
plotseries of events in a story itne order in which they happen
plural nounmore than one person, place, or thing
possessive nounshows ownership
posseive pronounmy, your, his, her, its, our, and their
prepositionrelates the noun or pronoun to another word in the sentence
pronouna word that takes the place of a noun
proper nounnames a particular person, place, or thing
alliterationrepetition of an initial consonant sound
personificationgiving life to inanimate objects
onomatopoeiawords that sound like what they mean
apostrophea direct address to a person or thing as if it were alive and present
similecomparing two dissimilar objects using like or as
metaphoran implied comparison between two dissimilar things whereby one object becomes the other
hyperbolean exaggeration
ironywhen the outcome is the opposite of what is expected
oxymorona contradiction of terms
synedochepart for the whole
the feelings a word arousesconnotation
how now brown cowassonance
She sells sea shells.alliteration
repetition of internal consonant soundsconsonance
extreme exaggerationhyperbole
when a character says one thing but means anotherverbal irony
when the audience knows more than the characterdramatic irony
normal everyday writing in sentencesprose
the language of poetryverse
repetition of grammatical structureparallelism
a long prose narrativenovel
punctuation mark used in a contraction or to show possessionapostrophe
used after an introductory clausecomma
when a character gets what he deservespoetic justice
similea comparison of two unlike objects; USES LIKE or AS
hyperbolea large exaggeration
personificationgiving an non-human thing human qualities
onomatopoeiawords that sound like their meaning
alliterationa series of words that begin with the same letter
idioma common expression used to mean something else
alliterationPeter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
literal languagemeans exactly what it says
metaphorYour eyes are diamonds.
simileYour eyes are like diamonds.
hyperboleThere were a thousand people at my party.
onomatopoeiaWe watched the BLIP on the computer monitor.
personificationThe stars reached down from the sky.
metaphora comparison of two unlike objects;does NOT use LIKE or AS
commapunctuation mark used to separate items in a series
denotationdictionary definition
colonpunctuation mark used before a list
omniscientthe narrator knows all the characters' thoughts
first personuses the pronoun I
in medias resin the middle of things
expositionexplains background and makes conflict clear
moodthe feelings evoked in the reader
tonehow the author feels
onomatopoeiaThe pop of the balloon scared me.
metaphorYou are the light of my life.
simileYou're as ugly as roadkill.
oxymoronBrawling Love
anecdotea short story about a funny event
allusionreference to something outside the work usually mythical, biblical, etc.

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