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| All the emotions or feelings a word can arouse, such as the positive or good feeling associated with the word love. |
| The process of pointing out differences between things. |
| A form of language that is spoken in a particular place or by a particular group of people. |
| Consists of the conversations characters have with one another. Dialogue has two main functions:
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| An author's choice of words based on their correctness, clearness, or effectiveness.
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| The form of literature known as plays; but drama also refers to the type of serious play that is often concerned with the leading character’s relationship to society rather than with some tragic flaw within his personality. |
| A literary work (or a part of a literary work) in which a character is speaking about him or herself as if another person were present. The words of the speaker reveal something important about his or her character. |
| A character who undergoes adaptation, change, or growth, for example, Jem in To Kill a Mockingbird or Oedipus in Oedipus Rex |
| A short poem or verse written in memory of someone. |
| An extreme overstatement of an idea. It is often used for purposes of emphasis or humor. |
| The beginning of the story where:
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| All that happens after the climax. This is the action which works out the decision arrived at during the climax. The resolution (denouement) follows. |
| Prose writing that tells an imaginary story. The writer of a fictional work might invent all the events and characters in it or might base parts of the story on real people or events. |
| Writers use figurative language – expressions that are not literally true – to create original descriptions. |