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SOL LITERARY TERMS

AB
end rhymewords that rhyme at the end of a line
internal rhymewords that rhyme within a line
alliterationrepetition of beginning consonant sounds
consonancerepetition of consonat sounds within and at the ends of words
assonancerepetition of vowel sounds within different words
symbolis something that stands for, or represents something beyond itself
repetitionword or group of words is repeated in a selection
fictionrefers to imaginativ works of prose, including the novel and short story
folk taleexhibit a fairy-tale unreality
motivationthe author's purpose
stanzarepresents a paragraph, main idea
allegorycharacters that stand for abstract ideas or concepts
similecomparison between 2 unlike things using "like" or "as"
ironycontast between what is stated and what is meant or what is expected and what actually happens
allusionA reference to something or someone, often literary.
antagonistA major character who opposes the protagonist, or main character, in a story or play.
archetypea character who represents a certain type of person.
assonancethe repetition of vowel sounds, as in ' Day's wane away".
atmospherethe overall feeling of a work, related to tone and mood.
blank verseunrhymed lines of poetry, usually in iambic pentameter.
characterizationthe means by which an author establishes character.
climaxthe point at which the action in a story or play reaches its emotional peak.
conflictthe elements that create a plot.
contrast(verb) to explain how two things differ.
coupletsa pair of rhyming lines in a poem, often set off from the rest of the poem.
denouementthe resolution of the conflict in a plot after the climax.
dramatic monologuea poem with a fictional narrator, addressed to someone whose identity the audience knows, but who doesn't say anything.
elegya poem mourning the dead.
end rhymerhyming words that are at the ends of thier respective lines.
epica long poem narrating the adventures of a heroic figure.
fablea story that illustrates a moral, often using animals as the characters.figurative language
figurative languagelanguage that does not maen exactly what it says.
first person point of viewthe point of view of a piece of writing in which that narrator refers to himself as "I".
foreshadowinga technique in which an author gives clues about something that will happen later in the story.
free versepoetry with no set meter(rhythm) or rhyme scheme.
genrea kind of style, usually of art or literature.
hyperbolea huge exaggeration
iambic pentameterten-syllable lines in which every other syllable is stressed.
imagerythe use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks.
internal rhymea rhyme that occures within one line.
ironylanguage that conveys a certain idea by saying just the opposite.
literal languagelanguage that means exactly what it says.
lyrica type of poetry that expresses the poet's emotions.
metaphora comparison that doesn't use "like" or "as".
meterthe pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in the lines of a poem.
monologuea long speech by one character in a play or story.
moodthe emotional atmosphere of a given piece of writing.
motifa theme or pattern that recures in a work.
mytha legend that embodies the beliefs of people and offers some explanation for natural and social phenomena.
onomatopoeiathe use of words that sound like what they mean.
oxymorona phrase made up of two seemingly opposite words.
paradoxa seeming contradication
parodya humorous, exaggerated imitation of another work.
personificationgiving an inanimate object human characteristics.
plotthe action of the story


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