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