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144 Terms
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Abstract
Complex, discusses intangible qualities like good and evil, seldom uses examples to support its points.
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Academic
Dry and rhetorical writing; sucking all the life out of its subject with analysis.
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Accent
In poetry, the stressed portion of a word.
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Aesthetic
Appealing to the senses; a coherent sense of taste.
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Allegory
A story in which each aspect of the story has a symbolic meaning outside the tale itself.
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Alliteration
The repetition of initial consonant sounds.
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Allusion
A reference to another work or famous figure.
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Anachronism
"Misplaced in time." An aspect of a story that doesn't belong in its supposed time setting.
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Analogy
A comparison, usually involving two or more symbolic parts, employed to clarify an action or a relationship.
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Anecdote
A Short Narrative
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Antecedent
The word, phrase, or clause that determines what a pronoun refers to.
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Anthropomorphism
When inanimate objects are given human characteristics. Often confused with personification.
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Anticlimax
Occurs when an action produces far smaller results than one had been led to expect.
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Antihero
A protagonist who is markedly unheroic: morally weak, cowardly, dishonest, or any number of other unsavory qualities.
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Aphorism
A short and usually witty saying.
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Apostrophe
A figure of speech wherein the speaker talks directly to something that is nonhuman.
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Archaism
The use of deliberately old-fashioned language.
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Aside
A speech (usually just a short comment) made by an actor to the audience, as though momentarily stepping outside of the action on stage.
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Aspect
A trait or characteristic
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Assonance
The repeated use of vowel sounds: "Old king Cole was a merry old soul."
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Atmosphere
The emotional tone or background that surrounds a scene
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Ballad
A long, narrative poem, usually in meter and rhyme. Typically has a naive folksy quality.
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Bathos
Writing strains for grandeur it can't support and tries too hard to be a tear jerker.
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Pathos
Writing evokes feelings of dignified pity and sympathy.
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Black humor
The use of disturbing themes in comedy.
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Bombast
Pretentious, exaggeratedly learned language.
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Burlesque
Broad parody, one that takes a style or form and exaggerates it into ridiculousness.
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Cacophony
In poetry, using deliberately harsh, awkward sounds.
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Cadence
The beat or rhythm or poetry in a general sense.
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Canto
The name for a section division in a long work of poetry.
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Caricature
A portrait (verbal or otherwise) that exaggerates a facet of personality.
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Catharsis
Drawn from Aristotle's writings on tragedy. Refers to the "cleansing" of emotion an audience member experiences during a play
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Chorus
In Greek drama, the group of citizens who stand outside the main action on stage and comment on it.
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Classic
Typical, or an accepted masterpiece.
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Coinage (neologism)
A new word, usually one invented on the spot.
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Colloquialism
A word or phrase used in everyday conversational English that isn't a part of accepted "school-book" English.
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Complex (Dense)
Suggesting that there is more than one possibility in the meaning of words; subtleties and variations; multiple layers of interpretation; meaning both explicit and implicit
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Conceit (Controlling Image)
A startling or unusual metaphor, or to a metaphor developed and expanded upon several lines.
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Denotation
A word's literal meaning.
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Connotation
Everything other than the literal meaning that a word suggests or implies.
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Consonance
The repetition of consonant sounds within words (rather than at their beginnings)
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Couplet
A pair of lines that end in rhyme
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Decorum
A character's speech must be styled according to her social station, and in accordance to the situation.
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Diction
The words an author chooses to use.
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Syntax
The ordering and structuring of words.
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Dirge
A song for the dead. Its tone is typically slow, heavy, depressed, and melancholy
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Dissonance
Refers to the grating of incompatible sounds.
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Doggerel
Crude, simplistic verse, often in sing-song rhyme, like limericks.
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Dramatic Irony
When the audience knows something that the characters in the drama do not
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Dramatic Monologue
When a single speaker in literature says something to a silent audience.
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Elegy
A type of poem that meditates on death or mortality in a serious, thoughtful manner.
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Elements
Basic techniques of each genre of literature
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Enjambment
The continuation of a syntactic unit from one line or couplet of a poem to the next with no pause.
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Epic
A very long narrative poem on a serious theme in a dignified style; typically deal with glorious or profound subject matter.
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Epitaph
Lines that commemorate the dead at their burial place.
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Euphemism
A word or phrase that takes the place of a harsh, unpleasant, or impolite reality.
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Euphony
When sounds blend harmoniously.
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Explicit
To say or write something directly and clearly.
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Farce
Extremely broad humor; in earlier times, a funny play or a comedy.
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Feminine rhyme
Lines rhymed by their final two syllables. Properly, the penultimate syllables are stressed and the final syllables are unstressed.
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Foil
A secondary character whose purpose is to highlight the characteristics of a main character, usually by contrast.
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Foot
The basic rhythmic unit of a line of poetry, formed by a combination of two or three syllables, either stressed or unstressed.
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Foreshadowing
An event of statement in a narrative that in miniature suggests a larger event that comes later.
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Free verse
poetry written without a regular rhyme scheme or metrical pattern
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Genre
A sub-category of literature.
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Gothic
A sensibility that includes such features as dark, gloomy castles and weird screams from the attic each night.
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Hubris
The excessive pride or ambition that leads to the main character's downfall
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Hyperbole
Exaggeration or deliberate overstatement.
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Implicit
To say or write something that suggests and implies but never says it directly or clearly.
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In media res
Latin for "in the midst of things," i.e. beginning an epic poem in the middle of the action.
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Interior Monologue
Refers to writing that records the mental talking that goes on inside a character's head; tends to be coherent.
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Inversion
Switching the customary order of elements in a sentence or phrase.
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Irony
A statement that means the opposite of what it seems to mean; uses an undertow of meaning, sliding against the literal a la Jane Austen.
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Lament
A poem of sadness or grief over the death of a loved one or over some other intense loss.
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Lampoon
A satire.
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Loose sentence
A sentence that is complete before its end: Jack loved Barbara despite her irritating snorting laugh.
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Periodic Sentence
A sentence that is not grammatically complete until it has reached it s final phrase: Despite Barbara's irritation at Jack, she loved him.
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Lyric
A type of poetry that explores the poet's personal interpretation of and feelings about the world.
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Masculine rhyme
A rhyme ending on the final stressed syllable (regular old rhyme)
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Meaning
What makes sense, what's important.
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Melodrama
A form of cheesy theater in which the hero is very, very good, the villain mean and rotten, and the heroine oh-so-pure.
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Metaphor
A comparison or analogy that states one thing IS another.
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Simile
A comparison or analogy that typically uses like or as.
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Metonymy
A word that is used to stand for something else that it has attributes of or is associated with.
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Nemesis
The protagonist's arch enemy or supreme and persistent difficulty.
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Objectivity
Treatment of subject matter in an impersonal manner or from an outside view.
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Subjectivity
A treatment of subject matter that uses the interior or personal view of a single observer and is typically colored with that observer's emotional responses.
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Onomatopoeia
Words that sound like what they mean
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Opposition
A pairing of images whereby each becomes more striking and informative because it's placed in contrast to the other one.
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Oxymoron
A phrase composed of opposites; a contradiction.
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Parable
A story that instructs.
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Paradox
A situation or statement that seems to contradict itself, but on closer inspection, does not.
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Parallelism
Repeated syntactical similarities used for effect.
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Paraphrase
To restate phrases and sentences in your own words.
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Parenthetical phrase
A phrase set off by commas that interrupts the flow of a sentence with some commentary or added detail.
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Parody
The work that results when a specific work is exaggerated to ridiculousness.
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Pastoral
A poem set in tranquil nature or even more specifically, one about shepherds.