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Allegory
A prose or poetic narrative in which the characters, behavior, and even the setting demonstrates multiple levels of meaning and significance.
Alliteration
The sequential repetition of a similar initial sound, usually applied to consonants, usually heard in closely proximate stressed syllables.
Allusion
A reference to a literary or historical event, person, or place.
Anapestic
A metrical foot in poetry that consists of two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed.
Anaphora
The regular repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases or clauses.
Anecdote
A brief story or tale told by a character in a piece of literature.
Antithesis
The juxtaposition of sharply contrasting ideas in balanced or parallel words, phrases, grammatical structure, or ideas.
Assonance
A repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds usually found in stressed syllables of close proximity.
Asyndeton
A style in which conjunctions are omitted, usually producing a fast-paced, more rapid prose.
Attitude
The sense expressed by the tone of voice and/or the mood of a piece of writing
Ballad
A narrative poem that is, or originally was, meant to be sung.
Ballad stanza
A common stanza form, consisting of a quatrain that alternates four-beat and three-beat lines: one and three are unrhymed iambic tetrameter, and two and four are rhymed iambic trimeter.
Blank verse
The verse form that most resembles common speech.
Caesura
A pause in a line of verse, indicated by natural speech patterns rather than due to specific metrical patterns.
Caricature
A depiction in which a character's characteristics or features are so deliberately exaggerated as to render them absurd.
Chiasmus
A figure of speech by which the order of the terms in the first of two parallel clauses is reversed in the second.
Colloquial
Ordinary language, the vernacular.
Conceit
A comparison of two unlikely things that is drawn out within a piece of literature, in particular an extended metaphor within a poem.
Connotation
What is suggested by a word, apart from what it explicitly describes, often referred to as the implied meaning of a word.
Consonance
The repetition of a sequence of two or more consonants, but with a change in the intervening vowels, such as pitter-patter, pish-posh, clinging and clanging.
Couplet
two rhyming lines of iambic pentameter that together present a single idea or connection.
Dactylic
A metrical foot in poetry that consists of two stressed syllables followed by one unstressed syllable.
Denotation
A direct and specific meaning, often referred to as the dictionary meaning of a word.
Dialect
The language and speech idiosyncrasies of a specific area, region, or group of people.
Diction
The specific word choice an author uses to persuade or convey tone, purpose, or effect.
Dramatic monologue
A monologue set in a specific situation and spoken to an imaginary audience.
Elegy
A poetic lament upon the death of a particular person, usually ending in consolation.
Enjambment
The continuation of a sentence from one line or couplet of a poem to the next.
Epic
a poem that celebrates, in a continuous narrative, the achievements of mighty heroes and heroines, often concerned with the founding of a nation or developing of a culture: it uses elevated language and grand, high style.
Extended metaphor
A detailed and complex metaphor that extends over a long section of a work, also known as a conceit.
Fable
A legend or a short moral story often using animals as characters.
Falling action
That part of plot structure in which the complications of the rising action are untangled. This is also known as the denouement.
Farce
A play or scene in a play or book that is characterized by broad humor, wild antics, and often slapstick and physical humor.
Flashback
Retrospection, where an earlier event is inserted into the normal chronology of the narrative.
Formal diction
Language that is lofty, dignified, and impersonal.
Free verse
Poetry that is characterized by varying line lengths, lack of traditional meter, and nonrhyming lines.
Genre
A type or class of literature such as epic or narrative or poetry or belles lettres.
Hyperbole
Overstatement characterized by exaggerated language.
Iambic
A metrical foot in poetry that consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
Idyll
A short poem describing a country or pastoral scene, praising the simplicity and peace of rustic life.
Imagery
Broadly defined, any sensory detail or evocation in a work; more narrowly, the use of figurative language to evoke a feeling, to call to mind an idea, or to describe an object.
Informal Diction
Language that is not as lofty or impersonal as formal diction; similar to everyday speech.
Irony
A situation or statement characterized by significant difference between what is expected or understood and what actually happens or is meant.
Jargon
Specialized or technical language of a trade, profession, or similar group.
Juxtaposition
The location of one thing as being adjacent or juxtaposed with another.
Limited point of view
A perspective confined to a single character, whether a first person or a third person; the reader cannot know for sure what is going on in the minds of other characters.
Loose sentence
A sentence grammatically complete and usually stating its main idea before the end.
Lyric
Originally designated poems meant to be sung to the accompaniment of a lyre; now any short poem in which the speaker expresses intense personal emotion rather than describing a narrative or dramatic situation.
Message
A misleading term for theme; the central idea or statement of a story, or area of inquiry or explanation.
Metaphor
One thing pictured as if it were something else, suggesting a likeness or analogy between them.
Meter
The more or less regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.
Metonymy
A figure of speech in which an attribute or commonly associated feature is used to name or designate something.
Mood
A feeling or ambiance resulting from the tone of a piece as well as the writer/narrator's attitude and point of view.
Motif
A recurrent device, formula, or situation that often serves as a signal for the appearance of a character or event.
Narrative structure
A textual organization based on sequences of connected events, usually presented in a straightforward, chronological framework.
Narrator
The "character" who "tells" the story, or in poetry, the persona.
Occasional poem
A poem written about or for a specific occasion, public or private.
Ode
A lyric poem that is somewhat serious in subject and treatment, is elevated in style, and sometimes uses elaborate stanza structure, which is often patterned in sets of three.
Omniscient point of view
Also called unlimited focus: a perspective that can be seen from one character's view, then another's, then another's, or can be moved in or out of the mind of any character at any time.
Onomatopoeia
A word capturing or approximating the sound of what described.
Overstatement
Exaggerated language; also called hyperbole.
Parable
A short fiction that illustrates an explicit moral lesson through the use of analogy.
Paradox
A statement that seems contradictory but may actually be true.
Parody
A work that imitates another work for comic effect by exaggerating the style and changing the content of the original.
Pastoral
A work that describes the simple life of country folk, usually shepherds who live a timeless, painless life in a world full of beauty, music, and love.
Periodic sentence
A sentence that is not grammatically complete until the end.
Persona
The voice or figure of the author who tells and structures the story who may or may not share the values of the actual author.
Personification
Treating an abstraction or nonhuman object as if it were a person by endowing it with human qualities.
Plot
the arrangement of the narration based on the cause-effect relationship of the events
Protagonist
The main character in a work, who may or may not be heroic.
Quatrain
A poetic stanza of four lines.
Realism
the practice in literature of attempting to describe nature and life without idealization and with attention to detail
Refrain
a repeated stanza or line in a poem or song
Rhetorical question
A question that is asked simply for the sake of stylistic effect and is not expected to be answered
Rhythm
The modulation of weak and strong elements in the flow of speech
Rising action
the development of action in a work, usually at the beginning
Sarcasm
a form of verbal irony in which apparent praise is actually harshly or bitterly critical
Satire
a literary work that holds up human failings to ridicule and censure
Scansion
The analysis of verse to show its meter
Setting
The time and place of the action in a story, poem, or play.
Shaped verse
poetry that is shaped to look like an object
Simile
a direct, explicit comparison of one thing to another, usually using the words like or as to draw the connection
Speaker
The person, not necessarily the author, who is the voice of a poem
Stanza
a section of a poem demarcated by extra line spacing
Stereotype
A characterization based on conscious or unconscious assumptions that some aspect, such as gender, age, ethnic or national identity, religion, occupation, marital status, and so on, are predictably accompanied by certain character traits, actions, even values.
Stock character
One who appears in a number of stories or plays such as the cruel stepmother, the femme fatale, etc.
Structure
The organization or arrangement of the various elements in a work.
Style
A distinctive manner of expression; each author's style is expressed through his or her diction, rhythm, imagery, and so on. It is a writer's typical way of writing.
Symbolism
A person, place, thing, event, or pattern in a literary work that designated itself and at the same time figuratively represents or "stands for" something else.
Syntax
the way words are put together to form phrases, clauses, and sentences
Terza rima
a verse form consisting of three-line stanzas in which the second line of each rhymes with the first and third of the next
Theme
A generalized, abstract paraphrase of the inferred central or dominant idea or concern of a work; the statement a poem makes about its subject.
Tone
the attitude a literary work takes toward its subject and theme
Tragedy
A drama in which a character is brought to a disastrous end in his or her confrontation with a superior force.
Trochaic
a metrical foot in poetry that is the opposite of iambic. The first syllable is stressed, the second is not.
Turning point
the third part of plot structure, the point at which the action stops rising and begins falling or reversing
Villanelle
a verse form consisting of 19 lines divided into six stanzas - five tercets and one quatrain.
Voice
The acknowledged or unacknowledged source of words of the story; the speaker, a "person" telling the story or poem.
Rhyme
The repetition of the same or similar sounds, most often at the ends of lines.