A | B |
Metaphor | creation of an image with no like or as |
Simile | creation of an image with like or as |
Apostrophe | direct address of person or thing |
Alliteration | repetition of consonants |
Assonance | rhyming or harmony of vowels |
Onomatopoeia | use of words or sounds to imitate sound effects |
Climax | high point |
Puns | play on words |
Personification | give inanimate object human characteristics |
Hyperbole | exaggeration |
Irony | use of a word to convey opposite meaning |
Oxymoron | a linking of an adjective and noun which contradict each other |
Paradox | a 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 IRONY | As I fell down the stairs headfirst, I heard her say, "Look at that coordination!" |
SITUATIONAL IRONY | The cobbler's children go barefoot because they have no shoes. |
DRAMATIC IRONY | Oedipus 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." |
PUN | Mercutio 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." |
simile | A comparison between two distinctly different things, using the word "like" or "as" |
personification | A figure of speech where animals, ideas or objects are given human characteristics |
fiction | A literary work whose content is produced by the imagination and is not necessarily based on fact |
symbol | A person, place, thing, or an event that has meaning in itself and stands for something beyond itself as well; it can signify something else |
irony | A term that suggests some sort of discrepancy between appearance and reality; says one thing and means another |
biography | An account of a person’s life written or told by another person |
metaphor | An imaginative comparison between two unlike things in which one thing is said to be another thing |
hyperbole | An overstatement or exaggeration |
dialogue | Conversation between characters in a drama or narrative |
science fiction | Fiction 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 |
fantasy | Imaginative fiction featuring esp. strange settings and grotesque characters; things happen that can not happen in real life |
flashback | Interruption in the present action of the plot to show events that happened at an earlier time |
point of view | The angle or perspective from which a story is told |
autobiography | The angle or perspective from which a story is told |
antagonist | The character that contends with or opposes another character |
plot | The events or main story in a literary work |
theme | The general idea or insight about life that a work of literature reveals |
foreshadowing | The introduction of clues early in a story to suggest or anticipate significant events that will develop later |
resolution | The last part of the story when the characters’ problems are solved and the story ends |
characters | The people or animals in a work of fiction or drama |
narrator | The person who tells the story |
climax | The point of highest dramatic tension or a major turning point in the action; the most emotional or suspenseful moment in story |
protagonist | The main character in a literary work |
alliteration | The repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of words |
conflict | The struggle between persons or forces in a work of drama or fiction |
setting | The time and place in which the events of a work of literature take place |
dialect | The way of speaking that is characteristic of a certain geographical area or a certain group of people |
nonfiction | Writing that deals with real people, things, events, or places |
Personification | giving an inanimate object human-like characteristics |
Simile | a comparison using "like" or "as" |
Metaphor | making a direct comparison |
Mood | the feeling or atmosphere that the writer creates for the reader |
Theme | the main idea in a work of literature |
Symbolism | when something concrete represents an abstract idea |
tone | the writer's attitude is revealed through this |
plot | the structure of a story |
aside | a short speech delivered by an actor in a play, expressing a character's thoughts |
assonance | repetition of vowel sounds followed by different consonants in two or more stressed syllables |
autobiography | form on nonfiction in which a person tells his or her own life story |
blank verse | poetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter lines |
character | a person or an animal who takes part in the action of a literary work |
characterization | the act of creating and developing a character |
direct characterization | the author directly states a character's traits |
indirect characterization | an author tells what a character looks like, does, and says, and how other characters react to him |
round character | shows many different traits--faults as well as virtues |
flat character | we see only one side of a character |
dynamic character | develops and grows during the course of the story |
static character | does not change or grow |
climax | the high point of interest or supsense in a story, novel, or play |
conflict | a sturggle between opposing forces |
external conflict | main character struggles against and outside force |
internal conflict | involves a character in conflict with himself or herself |
connotation | the set of ideas associeated with a word in addition to its explicit meaning |
couplet | a pair of rhyming lines usually of the sme lenght and meter |
denotation | a words dictionary meaning, independent of other associations that the word may have |
dialcect | from of language spoken by people in a particular region or group |
dialogue | a conversaation between characters |
diction | word choice |
drama | a story written to be performed by actors |
dramatic poetry | poetry that utilizes the techniques of drama |
epic | a long narrative poem about the deeds of gods or heroes |
epic simile (Homeric simile) | an elaborate comparison of unlike subjects |
essay | a short nongiction work about a particular subject |
exposition | the part of the work that introduces the cahracters, the setting, and the basic situation |
fantasy | a highly imaginative writing that contains elements not found in real life |
fiction | prose writing that tells about imagninary charactes and events |
figurative language | writing or speech not meant to be interpreted literally |
foreshadowing | the use in a literary work of clues that suggest events that have yet to occur |
free verse | poetry not written in a regular rhythmical pattern, or meter |
genre | category or type of literature |
haiku | a three-line verse form. 5-7-5 syllables |
image | a word or phrase that appeals to one or more of the five senses |
imagery | the descriptive or figurative language used in literature to create word pictures for the reader |
verbal irony | words are used to suggest the opposite of what is meant |
dramatic irony | there is a contradiction between what a character thinks and what the reader or audience knows to be true |
irony of situation | an event occurs that directly contradicts the expectations of the characters |
lyric poem | a highly musical verse that expresses the observations and feelings of a single speaker |
metaphor | a figure of speech in which one thing is spoken of as though it were something else |
meter | a poem's rhythmical patter |
monologue | a speech by one character in a play, story, or poem |
mood | the feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage |
motivation | a reason that explains or partially explains why a character thinks, feels, acts, or behaves in a certain way |
myth | a fictional tale that explains the actions of gods or the causes of natural phenomena |
narration | writing that tells a story |
narrative | a story told in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or drama |
narrative poem | a poem that tells a story |
narrator | a speaker or character who tells a story |
nonfiction | prose writing that presents and explains ideas or that tells about real people, places, objects, or events |
novel | a long work of fiction |
onomatopoeia | the use of words that imitate sounds |
personification | a type of figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics |
persuasion | writing or speech that attempts to convice the reader to adopt a particular opinion or course of action |
plot | the sequence of events in a literary work |
poetry | one of the three major types of literature, the others being prose and drama |
prose | the ordinary form of written language |
quatrain | a stanza or poem made up of four lines, usually with a definite rhythm and rhyme scheme |
repetition | the use of any element of language--a sound, a word, a phrase, a clause, or a sentence--more than once |
rhyme | the repetition of sounds at the ends of words |
rhyme scheme | a regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem |
rhythm | the patter of beats, or stresses, in spoken or written language |
science fiction | writing that tells about imagninary events that involve science or technology |
setting | the timeand place of the action |
short story | a brief work of fiction |
simile | a figure of speech in which like or as is used to make a comparison between two basically unlike ideas |
soliloquy | a long speech expressing the thoughts of a character alone on stage |
sonnet | a fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in rhymed iambic pentameter |
tone | the writer's attitude toward his or her audience and subject of a literary work |
tragedy | a work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe for the main character |