Literature. came from the Latin word “Littera”
Littera. meaning letters and ==referring to an acquaintance with the written word.==
Literature. is the ==written work of arts of a specific culture,== sub culture, religion, philosophy or the study of such written work which may appear in poetry or in prose.
Examples of Literature:
Prose Fiction. is a narrative written without a metrical patter that tells an imaginary or invented story.
Drama. is the portrayal of fictional or non-fictional events through the performance of written dialogue either prose or poetry.
Poetry. Is a type of literature that conveys a thought, describes a scene or tells a story in a concentrated, lyrical arrangement of words.
Prose Non-Fiction. Any literary work that is based mainly on fact, even though it may contain fictional elements. Example: Essay, Journals and biography.
Literary Devices/Figurative Languages
Figurative Language. is a word or phrase that does not have its normal literal meaning. It used by the writer for the sake of comparison or dramatic effect.
Simile. a stated comparison between to unlike things or persons that have something in common using like or as. Example: Her smile is a mysterious as Mona Lisa’s.
Metaphor. an implied comparison between two persons or things that are unlike in most respects.
The example words like or as are left out. Example: The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
Personification. giving human quality to inanimate objects or abstract things. Example: The flowers dance in the garden.
Metonymy. Consists in the naming of a thing by one of its attributes. Example: The crown prefers taxes from the underlings to support his expenses.
Synecdoche. substituting a part for a whole, an individual for a class or a material for the thing. Example: Many squatters dream of roofs over their heads.
Hyperbole. An exaggeration used for artistic effect. Example: Thanks a million!
Litotes. a deliberate understatement used to affirm by negating the opposite. Example: The trip wasn’t a total lost.
Irony. The use of word to signify the opposite of its literal meaning. Example: You’re beautiful; You look like a Christmas tree.
Oxymoron. Putting together in one statement two contradictory terms. Example: The sound of silence is indeed, deafening.
Apostrophe. An address to a (a) dead person as though he were alive (b) an absent of a person as though he were present. Example: Ninoy, you’re not alone
Climax. the arrangement of words ideas according to their degree of importance; thus, the last set appears most valuable. Example: “I came, I saw, I conquered” – Julius Caesar
Anti-Climax. A real apparent or ludicrous decrease in importance or impressiveness of what is said. Example: He lost his shoelace, his house charred to ashes, his wife even abandoned him.
Anti-thesis. equating or balancing two opposing ideas. Example: There is a time to sow and there is a time to reap
Pun. A play on words with humorous, witty effect. Example: House’s everything for all Filipinos.
Paradox. A seemingly, contradictory but true example. Example: There is a grief in happiness.