English FIg Lang

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English

10th

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126 Terms

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Fiction
Literature created from the imagination
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NOnfiction
literature based in fact
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Fig Lang
Compares an idea to another to make the first easier to visualize, PIE- PUrpose, Inform, Entertain
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Metaphor
compares 2 thigns without using “like” or “as”, readers better understand the analysis
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Simile
Compares 2 things using “like” or “as, using direct characteristcs to relate a concept to something ther eader knows well
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Personification
Giving human like characteristics to nonhuman things, serves to give a better understanding of the non-human thing.
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Foreshadowing
Hints at what might happen next in the book, serves to keep the readers interested
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Irony
Opposite of what we would expect to happen, keeps the text unpredictable
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Dialect
Dialoque written to show how a character talks, helps authors bring characters to life
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Allusion
Making a refernace to another story/media/popular piece of work, serves to compare or make connections to existing ideas
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Hyperbole
Emphasize a situation, conveys emotion and intesity,
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Symbolism
A symbol for a certain idea or theme, used to provide deeper meanigns and can sometimes reveal themes.
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Allegory
Teaching a big lesson, idea, or theme, of complex ideas through a simple idea to simplify it.
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Imagery
Use 5 senses to bring the readers into the story
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Flashbacks
Provide insight on a characters past, we recieve more information on a character
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2CARS
2CARS- Clear, complete, accurate, relevant, specific
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Purpose of Satire
Using wit to attack something you think is wrong

Humerous, social activism

Satire is the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice or folly. a literary composition, in verse or prose, in which human folly and vice are held up to scorn, derision, or ridicule.
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Purpose of Satire
Promote change through comedy
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Affix
One or more letters occurring as a bound form attached to the beginning, end, or base of a word and serving to produce a derivative word or an inflectional form (e.g., a prefix or suffix).
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Allegory
A form of extended metaphor in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative are equated with meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning may have moral, social, religious, or political significance, and characters are often personifications of abstract ideas such as charity, greed, or envy.
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Alliteration
The repetition of initial sounds in neighboring words.
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Allusion
An implied or indirect reference in literature to a familiar person, place, or event.
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Analysis
The process or result of identifying the parts of a whole and their relationships to one another.
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Antonym
A word that is the opposite in meaning to another word.
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Argument/Position
The position or claim the author establishes. Arguments should be supported with valid evidence and reasoning and balanced by the inclusion of counterarguments that illustrate opposing viewpoints.
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Authors purpose
The author’s intent either to inform or teach someone about something, to entertain people or to persuade or convince his/her audience to do or not do something.
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Bias
The subtle presence of a positive or negative approach toward a topic.
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Biography
A written account of another person's life.
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Character
person, animal or inanimate object portrayed in a literary work.
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Characterization
The method an author uses to reveal characters and their various traits and personalities (e.g., direct, indirect).
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Climax
The turning point in a narrative; the moment when the conflict is at its most intense. Typically, the structure of stories, novels, and plays is one of rising action, in which tension builds to the climax.

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Compare/Contrast
Place together characters, situations, or ideas to show common and/or differing features in literary selections.
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Conflict/Problem
A struggle or clash between opposing characters, forces, or emotions.
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Connotation
\: The range of associations that a word or phrase suggests in addition to its dictionary meaning.
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Context Clues
Words and phrases in a sentence, paragraph, and/or whole text, which help reason out the meaning of an unfamiliar word.
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Cultural Significance
\: The generally accepted importance of a work representing a given culture.
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Defense of a claim
\: Support provided to mark an assertion as reasonable.
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Dialect
variety of a language distinct from the standard variety in pronunciation, grammar, or vocabulary.
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Dialogue
In its widest sense, dialogue is simply conversation between characters or speakers in a literary work; in its most restricted sense, it refers specifically to the speech of characters in a drama.
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Diction
An author’s choice of words, phrases, sentence structures and figurative language, which combine to help create meaning and tone.
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Differentiate
Distinguish, tell apart, and recognize differences between two or more items.
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Drama
The genre of literature represented by works intended for the stage; a work to be performed by actors on stage, radio, or television; play.
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Dramatic Script
The written text of a play, which includes the dialogue between characters, stage directions and often other expository information.
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Draw Conclusion
To make a judgment or decision based on reasoning rather than direct or implicit statement.
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Elements of Fiction
\: Traits that mark a work as imaginative or narrative discourse (e.g., plot, theme, symbol).
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Elements of nonfiction
Traits that mark a work as reportorial, analytical, informative or argumentative (e.g., facts, data, charts, graphics, headings).
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Evaluate
Examine and judge carefully. To judge or determine the significance, worth or quality of something; to assess
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Explain
to make understandable, plain or clear.
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Explicit
Clearly expressed or fully stated in the actual text.
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Exposition
A narrative device, often used at the beginning of a work that provides necessary background information about the characters and their circumstances.
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Fact
A piece of information provided objectively, presented as true.
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Falling Action
The part of a literary plot that is characterized by diminishing tensions and the resolution of the plot’s conflicts and complications.
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Fiction
Any story that is the product of imagination rather than a documentation of fact. Characters and events in such narratives may be based in real life but their ultimate form and configuration is a creation of the author.
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Figurative Language
Language that cannot be taken literally since it was written to create a special effect or feeling.
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First person
The “first person” or “personal” point of view relates events as they are perceived by a single character. The narrating character may offer opinions about the action and characters that differ from those of the author.
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Fiction
An organizational device used in literature to present action that occurred before current (present) time of the story. Flashbacks are often introduced as the dreams or recollections of one or more characters.
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Focus
The center of interest or attention.
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Foreshadowing
An organizational device used in literature to create expectation or to set up an explanation of later developments.
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Generalization
A conclusion drawn from specific information that is used to make a broad statement about a topic or person.
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Genre
A category used to classify literary works, usually by form, technique or content (e.g., prose, poetry).
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Headings, Graphics, and Charts
Any visual cues on a page of text that offer additional information to guide the reader’s comprehension. Headings typically are words or phrases in bold print that indicate a topic or the theme of a portion of text; graphics may be photographs, drawings, maps or any other pictorial representation; charts (and tables or graphs) condense data into a series of rows, lines or other shortened lists.
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Hyperbole
An exaggeration or overstatement (e.g., I had to wait forever.)
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Imagery
\: Descriptive or figurative language in a literary work; the use of language to create sensory impressions.
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Implicit
\: Though unexpressed in the actual text, meaning that may be understood by the reader; implied
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Inference
A judgment based on reasoning rather than on a direct or explicit statement. A conclusion based on facts or circumstances; understanding gained by “reading between the lines.”
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Informational Text
Nonfiction written primarily to convey factual information. Informational texts comprise the majority of printed material adults read (e.g., textbooks, newspapers, reports, directions, brochures, technical manuals).
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Interpret
To give reasons through an explanation to convey and represent the meaning or understanding of a text.
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Irony
The use of a word or phrase to mean the exact opposite of its literal or usual meaning; incongruity between the actual result of a sequence of events and the expected result.
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Key supporting details
Points of information in a text that strongly support the meaning or tell the story. Statements that define, describe, or otherwise provide information about the topic, theme, or main idea.
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Key words
Specific word choices in a text that strongly support the tone, mood, or meaning of the text.
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Literary device
Tool used by the author to enliven and provide voice to the text (e.g., dialogue, alliteration).
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Literary element
An essential technique used in literature (e.g., characterization, setting, plot, theme).
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Literary form
The overall structure or shape of a work that frequently follows an established design. Forms may refer to a literary type (narrative, short story) or to patterns of meter, lines, and rhymes (stanza, verse).
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Poetry
Can have

\-Rhyming

\-Metaphorical, emotion

\-Short and succinct

\-Imagery…fig lang

\-Stanzas, couplets
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Rhyming pattern
the pattern according to which end rhymes (rhymes located at the end of lines) are repeated in works poetry.
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Meter
the pattern of beats in a line of poetry.
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Prose
sentences and paragraphs without any metrical (or rhyming) structure
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Stanza
A paragraph in a poem
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Syntax
Changing the word order to produce rhythm or melody
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Free Verse
Doesn’t use a strict meter or rhyme scheme
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Sonnet
fixed verse form of 14 lines that are typically five-foot iambics rhyming according to a prescribed scheme.
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Ballad
Written in quatrains or couplets, usually the second and fourth lines of each quatrain will rhyme, the first and third lines may or may not rhyme, and roughly 14 lines,
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Heroic Couplet
Commonly used in epic and narrative poetry, and consisting of a rhyming pair of lines in iambic pentameter.
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Literary Movement
A trend or pattern of shared beliefs or practices that mark an approach to literature (e.g., Realism, Naturalism, Romanticism).
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Literary Nonfiction
Text that includes literary elements and devices usually associated with fiction to report on actual persons, places, or events. Examples include nature and travel text, biography, memoir and the essay.
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Main Idea
The author’s central thought; the chief topic of a text expressed or implied in a word or phrase; the topic sentence of a paragraph.
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Metaphor
The comparison of two unlike things in which no words of comparison (like or as) are used (e.g., The speech gave me food for thought.)
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Monologue
An extended speech spoken by one speaker, either to others or as if alone.
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Mood
The prevailing emotions or atmosphere of a work derived from literary devices such as dialogue and literary elements such as setting. The mood of a work is not always what might be expected based on its subject matter. Motif: A recurring subject, theme, or idea in a literary work.
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Multiple Meaning Words
Words that have several meanings depending upon how they are used in a sentence.
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Narrative
A story, actual or fictional, expressed orally or in text.
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Narrator
A person, animal, or thing telling the story or giving an account of something.
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Non-fiction
Text that is not fictional; designed primarily to explain, argue, instruct or describe rather than entertain. For the most part, its emphasis is factual.
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Opinion
A personal view, attitude, or appraisal.
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Personification
An object or abstract idea given human qualities or human form (e.g., Flowers danced about the lawn.)
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Plot
The structure of a story. The sequence in which the author arranges events in a story. The structure often includes the rising action, the climax, the falling action, and the resolution. The plot may have a protagonist who is opposed by an antagonist, creating what is called conflict.
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Poetry
In its broadest sense, text that aims to present ideas and evoke an emotional experience in the reader through the use of meter, imagery and connotative and concrete words. Some poetry has a carefully constructed structure based on rhythmic patterns. Poetry typically relies on words and expressions that have several layers of meaning (figurative language). It may also make use of the effects of regular rhythm on the ear and may make a strong appeal to the senses through the use of imagery.
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POV
The position of the narrator in relation to the story, as indicated by the narrator’s outlook from which the events are depicted (e.g., first person, third person limited, third person omniscient, etc). The perspective from which a speaker or author recounts a narrative or presents information. The author’s manner in revealing characters, events, and ideas; the vantage point from which a story is told.
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Prefix
Groups of letters placed before a word to alter its meaning.
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Propaganda
Information aimed at positively or negatively influencing the opinions or behaviors of large numbers of people.