2021 AP Literary Terms Test ~ 1-50

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50 Terms

1
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Ad Misericordiam

An appeal to the audience's sympathy and an attempt to persuade another using a hard-luck-story rather than logic or reason.

2
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Allegory

An expression, by means of symbolic fictional characters and actions, of truths about human conduct and experience.

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Alliteration

The repetition of accented consonant sounds at the beginning of words that are close to each other, usually to create an effect, rhythm, or emphasis.

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Allusion

A reference in literature or in art to previous literature, history, mythology, pop culture, current events, or the bible.

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Ambiguity

Quality of being intentionally unclear; events or situations that can be interpreted in more than one way.

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Anachronism

An element in a story that is out of its time frame.

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Anadiplosis

repeating the last word of clause at beginning of next clause

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Analogy

clarifies or explains an unfamiliar concept or object, or one that cannot be put into words, by comparing it with one which is familiar.

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Analysis

The process of examining the components of a literary work.

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Anecdote

A short and often personal story used to emphasize a point, develop a character or theme, or inject humor.

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Antagonist

A character who functions as a resisting force to the goals of the protagonist.

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Antecedent

The word or phrase to which a pronoun refers.

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Anticlimax

An often disappointing, sudden end to an intense situation.

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Antihero

A protagonist who carries the actions of the literary piece but does not embody the classic characteristics of courage, strength, and nobility.

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Antithesis

A concept that is directly opposed to a previously presented idea.

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Anapest

a metrical foot of poetry consisting of two unaccented syllables, followed by one accented syllable.

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Anaphora

Repetition of an opening word or phrase in a series of lines.

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Anthropomorphism

Giving a human quality, emotion or ambition to a non-human object or being.

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Aphorism

A terse statement that expresses a general truth or moral principle, sometimes considered a folk proverb.

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Apostrophe

A rhetorical (not expecting an answer) figure of direct address to a person, object, or abstract entity.

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Apotheosis

Elevating someone to the level of a god.

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Archetype

a character, situation, or symbol that is familiar to people from all cultures because it occurs frequently in literature, myth, religion, or folklore.

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Aside

a short speech or remark made by an actor to the audience rather than to the other characters, who do not hear him or her.

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Assonance

The repeated use of a vowel sound.

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Asyndeton

a rhetorical term for a writing style that omits conjunctions between words, phrases, or clauses.

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Attitude

The author's feelings toward the topic he or she is writing about.

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Aubade

a poem or song about lovers who must leave one another in the early hours of the morning.

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Ballad

A folk song or poem passed down orally that tells a story which may be derived from an actual incident, legend, or folklore.

29
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Bildungsroman

A novel whose principal subject is the moral, psychological, and intellectual development of a usually youthful main character.

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Blank Verse

Unrhymed poetry in iambic pentameter (five feet of two syllables each unstressed and stressed).

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Cacophony

Harsh, discordant sounds, unpleasant to the ear.

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Caesura

A speech pause occurring within a line.

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carpe diem

Latin for "seize the day."

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Catharsis

refers to an emotional cleansing or feeling or relief.

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Characterization

The way an author presents characters.

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Chiasmus

The opposite of parallel construction; inverting the second of two phrases that would otherwise be in parallel form.

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Colloquial

Of or relating to slang or regional dialect, used in familiar everyday conversation.

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Conceit

A far-fetched comparison between two seemingly unlike things; an extended metaphor that gains appeal from its unusual or extraordinary comparison.

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Connotation

Associations a word calls to mind.

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Consonance

The same consonant sound in words with different vowel sounds.

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Couplet

two successive rhyming lines of the same number of syllables, with matching cadence.

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Dactyl

a foot of poetry with three syllables, one stressed and two short or unstressed syllables.

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Denotation

The dictionary or literal meaning of a word or phrase.

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Denouement

the outcome or clarification at the end of a story or play; the winding down from climax to ending.

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deus ex machina

Literally, when the gods intervene at a story's end to resolve a seemingly impossible conflict. Refers to an unlikely or improbable coincidence.

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Diction

the deliberate choice of a style of language for a desired effect or tone. Words chosen to achieve a particular effect such as formal, informal, or colloquial.

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Didactic

a story, speech, essay or play is one in which the author's primary purpose is to instruct, teach or moralize.--> Can be used to describe tone!

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Distortion

an exaggeration or stretching of the truth to achieve a desired effect.

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Elegy

a type of literature, often a song or poem, that expresses sorrow or lamentation, usually for one who has died.

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Enjambment

in poetry, the running over of a sentence from one verse or stanza into the next without stopping at the end of the first.