AP Lit: Essential Literary Terms List (V2)

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/309

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

310 Terms

1
New cards

abstract language

Language describing ideas and qualities rather than observable or specific things, people, or places.

2
New cards

absurdist drama

a play illustrating the modern sense of human purposelessness in a universe without meaning or value

3
New cards

accentual meter

number of stressed syllables in each line, without regard to the unstressed syllables (found commonly in German Language)

4
New cards

accentual-syllabic meter

based on number of syllables in a line and on the pattern of stresses in each metrical unit or foot

5
New cards

adjectives

Describing words

6
New cards

allegories

expressions of truths or generalizations of human experiences through the use of symbolic fictional figures or actions

7
New cards

alliteration

Repetition of initial consonant sounds

8
New cards

allusions

a passing reference in a work of literature to another literary or historical work, figure, or event, or to a literary passage

9
New cards

anagnorisis

recognition or discovery on the part of the hero; change from ignorance to knowledge

10
New cards

analogy

the comparison of a subject to something that is similar to it in order to clarify the subject's nature, purpose, or function

11
New cards

anapestic foot

two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed one

12
New cards

anapestic trimeter

poetic meter where each line consists of three anapests (a metrical foot made up of two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed syllable)

13
New cards

anaphora

Intentional repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of successive lines, stanzas, sentences, or paragraphs

14
New cards

ancient Greek drama

theatrical performances, primarily tragedies and comedies, that were developed in ancient Greece or of Greek ancestry

15
New cards

antagonist

the main character in a work of drama, fiction, or narrative poetry (greek for "first actor" or "first contender")

16
New cards

anthology citations

collection of works, organized around a central theme, that has been assembled by an editor or publisher

17
New cards

antihero

character who is feckless, inept, and downtrodden - notably lacking in the conventional heroic qualities

18
New cards

antinovels

a work that derives its effects from eschewing such standard features of the genre as coherent plot, establishing setting, and sustained character development

19
New cards

antithesis

a figure of speech in which words or phrases taht are parallel in order and syntax express opposite and contrasting meanings

20
New cards

aphorisms

Short statements of truth

21
New cards

apostrophe

address to a dead or absent person or to an inanimate object or abstract concept

22
New cards

appositive

a noun or noun phrase that describes or equates with a nearby noun or pronoun

23
New cards

asides

a speech, usually brief, that, according to theatrical conventions, is heard only by the audience, or, sometimes, is addressed privately to another character on stage

24
New cards

assonance

repitition of consonant sounds in two or more successive words or stressed syllables - not necessarily nearby - that contain different vowel sounds

25
New cards

atmosphere

the predominant mood or tone in all or part of a literary work, which may, for example, be joyous, festive, tranquil, melancholy, eerie, tense, or ominous

26
New cards

author information

basic facts such as childhood, education, career, relationships, family and death

27
New cards

ballad meter

a four-line stanza rhymed abcd with four feet in lines one and three and three feet in lines two and four.

28
New cards

bibliographic information

details needed to identify and locate a source, such as a book, article, or website (usually include author, title, publication date, and publisher)

29
New cards

bildungsroman

a novel dealing with one person's formative years or spiritual education.

30
New cards

blank verse

unrhymed iambic pentameter

31
New cards

blocking of asides

The precise movement and positioning of actors on a stage in order to facilitate the performance of a play, ballet, film or opera

32
New cards

caesuras

pause in the midst of a verse line

33
New cards

catalectic foot (catalexis)

a missing unstressed syllable at the end of a trochaic or dactylic line

34
New cards

catharsis in tragedy

an emotional discharge through which one can achieve a state of moral or spiritual renewal or achieve a state of liberation from anxiety and stress

35
New cards

chracterization

identifying physical, emotional, and unique traits of a character

36
New cards

chiasmus

a reversal in the order of words in two otherwise parallel phrases

37
New cards

classical tragedy

a dramatic work where a noble hero's tragic flaw causes him/her to break a moral law that leads to his/her downfall

38
New cards

closed couplets

a rhyming couplet with end-stopped lines that is logically or grammatically complete

39
New cards

closed form of poetry

Poetry that sticks to predictable patterns and structures.

40
New cards

closet drama

a play that is written to be read rather than performed onstage.

41
New cards

colloquial language

Slang or common language that is informal

42
New cards

comedy

A humorous work of drama

43
New cards

common meter

a metrical pattern in poetry, particularly common in hymns and ballads (iambic pattern; stressed/unstressed)

44
New cards

complete predicate

consists of a verb and all the words that describe the verb and complete its meaning

45
New cards

complete subject

Includes all the words that tell whom or what the sentence is about

46
New cards

complex sentence

A sentence with one independent clause and at least one dependent clause

47
New cards

compound sentences

has two independent clauses and is joined by a conjunction

48
New cards

conceit, metaphysical

complex metaphor that is used in metaphysical poetry to explore abstract ideas, connecting them to the physical world in an unusual way

49
New cards

concrete language

Language that describes specific, observable things, people, or places, rather than ideas or qualities.

50
New cards

conjunctions, coordinating

conjunctions that join, or coordinate, two or more items (such as words, main clauses, or sentences)

51
New cards

consonance

Repetition of a consonant sound within two or more words in close proximity.

52
New cards

coordinated clauses

independent clause that is connected to another one of equal importance, often with a conjunction

53
New cards

coordinating conjunctions

for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so

54
New cards

coordination

link clauses in a compound sentence

55
New cards

cosmic irony

the idea that fate, destiny, or a god controls and toys with human hopes and expectations

56
New cards

couplets

two lines, one immediately after the other, that contain end rhyme

57
New cards

cumulative sentence

presents ideas in order of subject-verb-object

58
New cards

curtal sonnet

ten and a half line sonnet

59
New cards

dactylic feet

a metrical foot, or a beat in a line, containing three syllables in which first one is accented followed by second and third unaccented syllables (accented/unaccented/unaccented)

60
New cards

dactylic tetrameter

(stressed, unstressed, unstressed)

61
New cards

4 feet total in a line.

62
New cards

dependent clause

words that contain a subject and a predicate but cannot stand alone grammatically

63
New cards

detail selection order

is the specific words, incidents, images, or events the author uses to create a scene or narrative

64
New cards

dialogue

Conversation between characters

65
New cards

diction

A writer's or speaker's choice of words

66
New cards

dimeter

two feet per line

67
New cards

direct discourse

The direct expression of a character's speech or thought, either tagged or untagged.

68
New cards
69
New cards

Example: "May the Force be with you," she whispered." "What a strange thing to say," he thought.

70
New cards

direct object

the object that receives the direct action of the verb

71
New cards

direct satire

Stating an explicit criticism in a humorous way

72
New cards

doggerel tragedy

technical term for bad poetry, which is usually characterized by irregular verse, forced rhyme and overly sentimental tones

73
New cards

domestic tragedy

a type of play characterized by stories about common people, rather than ones of noble birth, who feel grand emotions and suffer devastating consequences

74
New cards

double rhyme

a rhyme in which the repeated vowel is in the second last syllable of the words involved

75
New cards

drama

a dramatic work intended for performance by actors on a stage

76
New cards

dramatic irony

when the audience knows something the characters do not

77
New cards

dramatic monologue

when a single speaker in literature says something to a silent audience

78
New cards

dramatic poetry

A type of poetry that utilizes the techniques of drama; the speaker is clearly someone other than the poet

79
New cards

eighteenth-century drama

1700-1785, represented by John Dryden in tragedy and William Congreve and Richard Brinsley Sheridan in comedy

80
New cards

-themes: politics, satire, celebrity culture, war, religion, historical events

81
New cards

Elizabethan drama

drama whose major authors were Shakespeare in both tragedy and comedy, and typically was in blank verse form

82
New cards

email, in order of works cited

Sender's Last Name, First Name. "Subject Line." Received by First and Last Names, Day Month Year.

83
New cards

endnotes, MLA style

Notes at the end of a paper acknowledging sources and providing additional references or information.

84
New cards

end rhyme

A word at the end of one line rhymes with a word at the end of another line

85
New cards

end-stopped lines

lines in which both the grammatical structure and the sense reach completion at the end (e.i. period)

86
New cards

English medieval drama

divided into mystery plays and morality plays, designed to illustrate narratives from the Old and New Testaments (authors are anonymous)

87
New cards

English (Shakespearean) sonnets

written in iambic pentameter and consisting of three quatrains and a final couplet with the rhyme scheme abab cdcd efef gg.

88
New cards

enjambments

the continuation of a sentence without a pause beyond the end of a line, couplet, or stanza.

89
New cards

epic poetry (epics)

a long, serious, poetic narrative about a significant event, often featuring a hero

90
New cards

epigrams

a pithy saying or remark expressing an idea in a clever and amusing way

91
New cards

epiphany

A moment of sudden revelation or insight

92
New cards

epistolary novels

Novels told in the form of series of letters written by their characters.

93
New cards

equivoque

a play on words; a pun; an expression capable of having more than one meaning

94
New cards

essay, understatement

a form of irony in which a point is deliberately expressed as less, in magnitude, value, or importance, than it actually is

95
New cards

exposition

a comprehensive description and explanation of an idea or theory.

96
New cards

extended metaphors

a metaphor in which the comparison is carried through several lines or even the entire literary work

97
New cards

eye rhyme

rhyme that appears correct from spelling but does not rhyme because of pronunciation

98
New cards

fallacy, pathetic

special type of personification, in which inanimate aspects of nature, such as the landscape, the season, or the weather, are represented as having human qualities or feelings

99
New cards

falling meters

trochaic and dactylic feet, which end on an unstressed syllable

100
New cards

farce

(n.) a play filled with ridiculous or absurd happenings; broad or far-fetched humor; a ridiculous sham