| A | B | 
| plot | the story line | 
| setting | time and place in a story | 
| characterization | personality trait of characters | 
| theme | central message of a work | 
| style | writers way of writing | 
| point of view | perspective from which the story is told (1st, 2nd, 3rd person) | 
| symbolism | uses something to represent something else | 
| foreshadowing | giving clues to suggest events that have yet to occur | 
| mood and atmosphere | feeling created (in the reader) by a work | 
| irony | contrast between what is stated and what is meant | 
| satire | writing that ridicules or criticizes individuals, ideas, social convention | 
| simile | making comparisons between two subjects using like or as | 
| metaphor | one thing is spoken of as if it were something else | 
| personification | a non-human subject is given human traits | 
| alliteration | repetition of first sound (Peter Piper picked) - repeated at least two times | 
| allusion | a reference to a well-known person, place, event, or literary work to make the writing stronger | 
| inference | a guess of what can be | 
| stanza | groups of lines in a poem - paragraphs, stanzas | 
| rhyme scheme | the regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem | 
| imagery | descriptive or figurative language used to create word pictures for the reader | 
| flashback | a section in a literary work that interrupts the chronological order of events to relate an event from an earlier time.  (goes back in time) | 
| protagonist | the good main character | 
| antagonist | the bad main character | 
| round (dynamic) character | the character that changes (Scrooge) | 
| flat (static) character | the character that does not change |