A | B |
Allegory | Type of literature where everything stands for abstract qualities |
Analogy | A point by point comparison |
Aphorism | A short true statement about life (Lost time is never found again) |
Autobiography | A book about the author |
Characterization | How a character's personality is revealed |
Dialect | The way a certain group of people speak |
Dramatic Irony | The audience knows but the character doesn't |
Dynamic Character | Character who changes |
External conflict | Character vs. outside world |
Fiction | Not true |
Figurative | Language not meant to be literal |
Flashback | Breaking up the timeline of a plot |
Foreshadowng | A hint of what's next |
Foil | Opposite Characters |
Haiku | 5-7-5 poem |
Internal conflict | Person vs. Self |
Limited | Narrator hears one person's thoughts |
Monologue | One person speaking |
Mood | Atmoshpere |
Narrative | Tells a story |
Narrator | Person telling the story |
Nonfiction | True |
Novel | Long fiction |
Omniscient | Narrator hears all thoughts |
Paradox | Seems to condradict itself, but is true |
Plot | Series of events |
Oxymoron | Phrase with two opposite words (thunderous silence) |
Stanza | A paragraph of poetry |
Static character | Character who does not change |
Tragic Hero | Good character who dies because of a flaw |
Theme | Main idea |
Tone | Author's feelings toward a subject |