✅ GCSE English Literary Devices

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English

10th

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127 Terms

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allegory

a literary work in which the characters and events represent particular qualities or ideas relating to morals, politics or religion

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alliteration

words that begin with the same sound (often the repetition of letters) placed closely together

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allusion

an unexplained or implicit reference to someone or something outside of the text

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analogy

where two unrelated objects are compared for their shared qualities

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anaphora

the repetition of the same phrase at the beginning of a sentence or clause

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anecdote

a short and interesting story, or an amusing event, often proposed to support or demonstrate a point

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antagonist

a character who opposes the main character

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anthropomorphism

where an animal or non-human object is given human form, behaviour or personality

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antithesis

a person or thing that is the direct opposite of someone or something else

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aphorism

a short statement that is intended to express a general truth

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apostrophe

addressing a person who is not present, or a thing that is personified

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archetype

a typical example of something, or the original model of something from which others are copied

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assonance

the repetition of the same or similar vowel sounds close together

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asyndeton

where conjunctions are left out between words or parts of a sentence, often creating a list-like style

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ballad

a type of poem that tells a narrative which was traditionally set to music and usually written in quatrains

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bildungsroman

a narrative or novel about events and experiences in the life of the main character as they mature and become an adult

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blank verse

a type of poetry that does not rhyme, usually with ten syllables in each line

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caesura

a pause within a line of poetry

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caricature

a highly exaggerated representation of a character in a text, often for comic effect

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catharsis

the release of strong or repressed emotions, usually by an audience

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characterisation

the act of creating and describing characters in literature, including their traits and psychological make-up

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chiasmus

when words, grammatical constructions or concepts are repeated in reverse order

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cliché

something or someone that is not at all original, surprising or interesting because it has very often been seen before

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climax

the highest point of tension or drama in a piece of writing

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colloquialism

the use of informal words or phrases in writing or speech

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connotation

a feeling or idea that is implied by a word that is separate from its dictionary meaning

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consonance

the same consonant sound repeated within a group of words

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couplet

a pair of consecutive lines of poetry that create a complete thought or idea

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denotation

the literal meaning or dictionary definition of a word

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denouement

the resolution of conflict in a narrative plot structure

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deus ex machina

an unnatural or very unlikely end to a story or event, that solves or removes any problems easily

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dialogue

the exchange of spoken words between characters in a piece of writing

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direct characterisation

when an author explicitly tells a reader directly what a character is like

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dramatic irony

when the audience or reader knows something the characters in the story do not

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dramatic monologue

a poem written as if someone is speaking to an unseen listener about important thoughts

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dystopian

an cruel or unfair society, especially an imaginary society in the future, in which there is a lot of hardship or suffering

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elegy

a serious, melancholic poem, often written to mourn the loss of someone who has died

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end rhyme

when the last syllables or words in two or more lines rhyme with each other

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end-stopped line

a line of poetry ending in a grammatical break, for example with a full stop

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enjambment

the continuing of a sentence from one line of a poem into the next line

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epigraph

a poem, quotation, or sentence, usually placed at the beginning of a piece of writing

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ethos

an argument that appeals to an audience’s morality by highlighting the speaker’s credibility or trustworthiness

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euphemism

a word or phrase used to avoid saying an unpleasant or offensive word

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exposition

the description or explanation of background information within a work of literature

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extended metaphor

a metaphor that is further developed throughout all or part of a piece of writing

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falling action

the part of the plot that occurs after the climax has been reached and the major conflict has happened

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fiction

literature in the form of prose that describes imaginary events and people

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figurative language

the use of non-literal phrases or words to elicit an emotional response from a reader or audience

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first person

when a story is narrated by one character from their own perspective, usually using the pronouns “I”, “me” and “my”

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flashback

a device that moves the reader from the present moment in a chronological piece of writing to a scene in the past

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foreshadowing

a device used by a writer to provide hints or clues to the reader or audience about what will happen later on in the text

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form

the type or genre of a text that a writer has chosen to use

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formal verse

a poem which uses a strict metre, rhyme and form, especially in fixed forms such as sonnets, villanelles, etc.

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free verse

a poem that does not use a strict metre or rhyme scheme

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genre

a specific literary style that involves a particular set of characteristics

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haiku

a specific type of Japanese poem which has 17 syllables divided into three lines of five, seven, and five syllables

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hamartia

the flaw in character which leads to the downfall of the protagonist in a tragedy

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heroic couplet

a verse form found in epic poetry, where the lines are in rhyming pairs

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hubris

excessive pride or self-confidence

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hyperbole

deliberate exaggeration used for effect

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iambic pentameter

a verse line consisting of ten syllables, organised into five pairs of alternating unstressed and stressed syllables

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idiom

a short expression or phrase that means something more than just its literal meaning

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imagery

the use of words to describe ideas or situations

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indirect characterisation

revealing details about a character without explicitly or directly stating what they are like

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in medias res

a story which begins in the middle of events, without any introduction

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internal rhyme

rhyme that occurs between words within a verse line

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intertextuality

the relationship a text may have with other texts

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irony

when there is a noticeable, often humorous, difference between what is written and its intended or expected meaning

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juxtaposition

the placement of two or more things side by side, often in order to bring out their differences

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language

the words, phrases and literary devices a writer uses for effect

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litotes

understatement used for rhetorical effect

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logos

an argument that appeals to someone's sense of reason

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malapropism

the unintentional misuse of a word by confusion with one of similar sound, often with humorous results

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metaphor

a figure of speech that makes a direct comparison by relating one thing to another unrelated thing

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metonymy

a figure of speech that refers to something by using a word that describes its qualities or is closely associated with it

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metre

the regular and rhythmic arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables according to a particular pattern

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monologue

an extended speech uttered by one character, either to others or as if alone

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motif

a recurring image or idea in a piece of writing

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narrative

the description of a series of events, usually in a novel

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ode

a poem, especially one that is written in praise of a particular person, thing, or event

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omniscient narrator

a narrator who is all-knowing about plot, characters as well as characters’ motivations and emotions

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onomatopoeia

words whose pronunciations imitate the sounds they describe

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oxymoron

a figure of speech that puts together opposite elements

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paradox

a statement that contradicts itself, or that must be both true and untrue at the same time

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parallelism

where similar ideas are arranged in phrases, sentences, and paragraphs that balance one element with another of equal importance and similar wording

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parody

a humorous piece of writing, drama, or music which imitates the style of a well-known person or represents a familiar situation in an exaggerated way

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pathetic fallacy

the use of inanimate objects, most commonly the weather, to reflect human feelings and tone

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pathos

an appeal to an audience’s emotion, often evoking pity, sadness, or tenderness

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persona

the narrative voice that a writer adopts for a specific piece of writing

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personification

giving human characteristics to an inanimate object, abstract thing or an animal

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perspective

the narrator’s point of view in a story

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plot

the sequence of events that make up a narrative

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polysyndeton

the overuse of the same connective (for example, using “and” in between every item in a long list)

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prolepsis

where the order of events in a narrative is disrupted so that a future plot point is told earlier in the narrative than it actually occurs

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prose

written language in its ordinary form (structured in sentences and paragraphs) rather than set out as poetry

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protagonist

the chief character in a literary work

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pun

the humorous use of a word or phrase that has several meanings or that sounds like another word

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quatrain

a stanza of four lines

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refrain

a word, line, or phrase repeated in a poem

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repetition

the intentional repeating of certain words, phrases or other literary devices in a text