Term | Definition | |
1 | Allegory | story or poem in which characters, settings, and events stand for other people or events or for abstract ideas or qualities. |
2 | Allusion | an indirect reference to someone or something that is known from history, literature, religion, politics, sports, science, or another branch of culture. |
3 | Ambiguity | deliberately suggesting two or more different, and sometimes conflicting, meanings in a work; an event or situation that may be interpreted in more than one way. |
4 | Anecdote | brief story, told to illustrate a point or serve as an example of something, often shows the character of an individual. |
5 | Aphorism | brief, cleverly worded statement that makes a wise observation about life, or of a principle or accepted general truth. |
6 | Characterization | Indirect: the author reveals to the reader what the character is like through appearance, dialogue, private thoughts, action, and effects on others. |
Direct: the author tells us directly what the character is like. | ||
Static: one who does not change much in the course of a story. | ||
Dynamic: one who changes in some important way as a result of the story’s action. | ||
Flat: only one or two personality traits; they are one dimensional. | ||
Round: more dimensions to their personality; they are complex, just like real people are. | ||
7 | Conflict | External: a conflict between two people, between a person and nature or a machine or between a person and a whole society. |
Internal: a conflict involving opposing forces within a person’s mind. | ||
8 | Diction | a speaker or writer’s choice of words. |
9 | Epiphany | a sudden realization. |
10 | Euphemism | substitute words that sound less offensive or more neutral than others. |
11 | Figurative Language | Words which are inaccurate if interpreted literally, but are used to describe. Similes and metaphors are common forms. |
12 | Foil | a character who acts as a contrast to another character. |
13 | Foreshadowing | the use of hints and clues to suggest what will happen later in a plot. |
14 | Hyperbole | a figure of speech that uses an incredible exaggeration or overstatement, for effect. |
15 | Imagery | the use of language to evoke a picture or a concrete sensation of a person, a thing, a place, or an experience. |
16 | Irony | Verbal: when a character says one thing but really means something else. |
Dramatic: a character is unaware of something that another character or the audience knows. | ||
Situational: when there is a discrepancy between what is expected to happen and what really does happen. | ||
17 | Juxtaposition | two normally unassociated ideas, words, or things are placed next to one another to create a contrasting effect. |
18 | Metaphor | a direct comparison between two unlike things. |
19 | Mood | an atmosphere created by a writer’s diction and the details selected. |
20 | Motif | a recurring image, word, phrase, action, idea, object, or situation used throughout a work unifying the work. |
21 | Oxymoron | a combination of opposite or contradictory terms in a brief phrase. |
22 | Pace | the rhythm of a story and how the chain of events fall into place. |
23 | Paradox | a statement that appears self-contradictory, but that reveals a kind of truth. |
24 | Personification | an object or animal is given human characteristics. |
25 | Satire | a type of writing that ridicules the shortcomings of people or institutions in an attempt to bring about a change. |
26 | Stream of Consciousness | a style of writing that portrays the inner (often chaotic) workings of a character’s mind. |
27 | Symbol | an object, character, action, or idea represents more than its literal meaning. |
28 | Tone | the attitude a writer takes toward the subject of a work, the characters in it, or the audience. |
29 | Theme | the insight about human life that is revealed in a literary work. |
30 | Verisimilitude | the appearance of being true or real. |