AP Lang Vocabulary Terms
Term | Definition | Examples | How to Identify/Remember | Don’t Mix it UP! |
Allegory | a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning | Tortoise and the Hare has the allegory of persistence over arrogance | often didactic | Not motif because that is a thematic idea that’s repeated; didactic is intended to teach |
Alliteration | Device that uses the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. | “From forth the fatal loins of these two foes.” | Repeats letters and sounds, watch out for that! | |
Allusion | a reference to a well-known person, character, place, event that a writer uses to deepen a readers understanding | biblical references, art, historical | ||
Ambiguity | a device that uses the quality of being open to more than one interpretation or meaning, inexactness | “The chicken is ready to eat” can mean that the animal is hungry or that the people are about to feast | More than one possible meaning, accidental or deliberate | Not ambivalence (that’s being mixed up emotionally) |
Ambivalence | Simultaneous and contradictory attitudes or feelings towards something or someone | “novel plot was good but character development was lacking, how do i feel about the book?” | ambivalence is many things at once, ambiguity is not being able to determine what the opinion or meaning is | |
Analogy | a comparison between two unlike things that explains their relation to teach other and emphasizes similarities | Finding a lost dog is like finding a needle in a haystack | explains much more than a metaphor to discuss why the comparison is being made more for logical explanations | |
Anaphora | A device that uses the repetition of words or phrases at the start of sentences | “Let freedom ring from Georgia. Let freedom ring from the Appalachians” | Repetition of phrases, but only at the start! Kind of syntax | |
Antithesis tricky tricky | literary device that places opposite words, ideas, or qualities parallel to each other to strengthen an argument | Keep your friends close but your enemies closer | contradictory statement parallel structure!!!!!!! that’s the key!! When the rich wage war its the poor who die parallel structure!!!!!!!!! rich adn poor are opposites! ahhh | diff from oxymoron, this contrast makes sense!! |
Aphorism | concise phrase used to describe a customary truth about life, device | Don’t judge a book by its cover The pen is mightier than the sword | can have negative connotations usually metaphorical | Not an idiom because those can’t be literal, while these can and aphorisms are universal while idioms are cultural |
Assonance | A device that uses the repetition of vowel sounds, usually stressed, in words that are close together to create rhythm | Stem end and blossom tend His tender heir might bear his memory | Similar vowel sounds | Consonance with consonants; alliteration is either vowel or consonant |
Asyndeton | absence of conjunctions between parts of a sentence | I came I saw I conquered I made you my temple, my mural, my sky | ||
Chiasmus | A device that repeats grammar constructions or words and phrases in reverse order | “who dotes, yet doubts, suspects, yet strongly loves” “All for one and one for all” | Watch for sentence structure | Parallelism and anaphora are often confused with it because of syntax usage |
Claim | an assertion that something is the case; a thesis that guides writing and declares the essay’s focus | “we live in a time of great change” | No facts or evidence yet, just a thesis | |
Clause | a unit of grammatical organization; can be independent or dependent | |||
Colloquialism | not formal diction, used in familiar conversations and not meant to be taken literally | Hit the hay Yo | Often in dialogue, slang, cultural expressions, idioms | |
Connotation | The implied emotional meaning of a word beyond its literal definition | Home has a connotation of warmth and family and it literally means a place people live in Snake = betrayal | watch for tone surrounding the word | Denotation is the actual definition |
Consonance | A device that uses the repetition of consonant sounds in words close together to create rhythm | “I have been one acquainted with the night” | Similar consonant sounds | Assonance with vowels, alliteration with both |
Denotation | The literal meaning of a word | Rose= not love, but a flower Snake= a reptile, not betrayal | ||
Diction | word choice that influences tone and style | Formal diction can be using commence instead of begin | Watch for how certain words add to description | never say just diction!! |
Didactic | A work such as a novel or tale that is intended to teach, especially when teaching moral instructions as an ulterior motive | Aesop’s fables that often have a hidden moral | Find it by considering if there is a message | allegory is : a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning |
Euphemism | device that uses the substitution of unpleasant or offensive phrase for something more agreeable and pleasing | passed away instead of dead | ||
Evidence | The available body of facts or info indicating whether a belief or claim is true | must be relevant to thesis, usually a quote | ||
Hyperbole | an extravagant exaggeration used to emphasize a point | so hungry i could eat a horse | ||
Idiom | an expression whose meaning is not literal, no underlying message though | he spilled the beans raining cats and dogs | generally cultural | |
Imagery | device that uses vivid descriptions that use all five senses to describe | as she walked through the wintery woods, her teeth chattered and the leaves crunched underfoot | can be auditory, olfactory, gustatory, tactile, and visual | |
Imply | to express, suggest, or insinuate something without a direct statement | Its getting late implies that they want to leave | ||
Infer | to deduce or conclude from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements and make a well-informed guess | someone eats something and makes a face, can infer they don’t like it | ||
Invective | Insulting, abusive, or highly critical language that is always negative | “You’re afraid of your own shadow | will always be negative, designed to hurt | Criticism is productive and helps, invectice language does not |
Irony | the use of words to signify the opposite of the intended expression as a device | A fire truck on fire What a beautiful day when its raining | Usually funny ,spot the opposite of the situation or something funny | |
Juxtaposition | the fact of two things being seen or placed close together with a contrasting effect | enter and do not enter sign right next to each other night and day | don’t have to be opposite | |
Litotes | understatement in which an affirmative is expressed b the negative of the contrary | I’ve had worse You won’t be sorry means you’ll be glad | ||
Loose sentence | a sentence in which the independent clause comes first and continues with more modifiers and subordinate clauses | We reached Paris, after a turbulent flight and exciting experiences, like ice cream… | ||
Metaphor | a comparison not using like or as to compare very unlike objects and suggest a relationship | heart of gold she’s a night owl eyes are a window to the soul | not as deatield or extensive as analogies very different things are being compared | |
Motif | device, noticeable and important recurring thematic element, especially a main idea or central theme | Romeo and Juliet has light and darkness Yellow brick road in oz | relates to motive of the passage, appears repeatedly to emphasize the idea | not theme, leads to the theme instead |
Onomatopoeia | a word being formed from a sound something makes, sound descriptors | boom, zap The leaves crunched underfoot. | ||
Oxymoron | A device that uses two words with opposite meanings in conjunction to express something, oftentimes creating paradoxes and contradictions | “She was pretty ugly” Parting is such sweet sorrow | Weird combo of words | Paradoxes are meant for deeper thought; juxtaposition is more involved and lengthy |
Paradox | a self-contradictory statement that provokes deep though, device | time travel This statement is false. The only rule is there are no rules. | logical arguments that lead to absurd conclusions | not like oxymoron because those make no sense and these make you think hard |
Parallelism | A device that uses the repetition of grammatical structure in a piece of writing, not necessarily the same words or phrase | “One small step for man, one great leap for mankind” | Usual formula of Adjective + noun+ preposition repeated Uses syntax | Not like chiasmus (doesn’t reverse) |
Parody | strategy; funny or exaggerated copy of a book song, movies that mimics the orignal in a silly way for entertainment, not to make a serious point | Pride and Prejudice and Zombies | never serious, just pokes fun!! | |
Pedantic | Giving too much attention to formal rules or small and irrelevant details, overly specific form of diction | An astounding amount of detail about a rose garden that has no symbolism or hidden meaning in a text | Strangely concentrated focus on insignificant details or overly repetitive phrases that add little meaning | |
Periodic sentence | a sentence that leaves the independent clause for last to create suspense | In spite of heavy snow, the game continued. | ||
Personification | A device that attributes human characteristics to something nonhuman, or the representation of an abstract quality or idea in human form. | “The sun smiled down at me” | Humanlike actions or characteristics given to a thing that wouldn’t otherwise have them to make them more relatable and connectable | |
Polysyndeton | multiple coordinating conjunctions used together to emphasize | Like, but, or, nor, and (FANBOY) All you are is mean, and a liar, and pathetic, and alone in life | Repetition of conjunctions, unique because its repeated with commas mainly | |
Repetition | repeating of a word or phrase two or more times | i got this i got this i got this | check for anaphora! | |
Sarcasm | the use of irony to mock or convey contempt | asking what movie is being seen while wearing all pink spilling coffee, that went well | different meaning than what is said | diff. from irony because that’s meant to say the opposite, but sarcasm criticizes |
Satire | a strategy, a type of humor that makes fun of people, society, or politics to make a point of problems | political cartoons | entire work! criticizes something major and problematic | |
Syllogism | device, using 2 logical statements to make a sometimes wrong conclusion to argue something | Unicorns can’t fly. I can’t fly. Therefore, I am a unicorn. | don’t have to be true!! form of reasoning | |
Symbol | A thing that represents or stands for something else, primarily when a material object represents an abstract concept or idea. | The dove for peace, black for mourning | ||
Syntax | sentence structure; a set of rules and principles in a language that dictates how phrases and clauses are arranged into sentences | needs subject and verb to be a sentence | ||
Warrant | the assumption that your reader needs to agree with in order to find your evidence strong; conclusion the reader comes to | Not found in the text, it comes from combining thesis and evidence together to make an assumption |
Term | Definition | Examples | How to Identify/Remember | Don’t Mix it UP! |
Allegory | a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning | Tortoise and the Hare has the allegory of persistence over arrogance | often didactic | Not motif because that is a thematic idea that’s repeated; didactic is intended to teach |
Alliteration | Device that uses the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. | “From forth the fatal loins of these two foes.” | Repeats letters and sounds, watch out for that! | |
Allusion | a reference to a well-known person, character, place, event that a writer uses to deepen a readers understanding | biblical references, art, historical | ||
Ambiguity | a device that uses the quality of being open to more than one interpretation or meaning, inexactness | “The chicken is ready to eat” can mean that the animal is hungry or that the people are about to feast | More than one possible meaning, accidental or deliberate | Not ambivalence (that’s being mixed up emotionally) |
Ambivalence | Simultaneous and contradictory attitudes or feelings towards something or someone | “novel plot was good but character development was lacking, how do i feel about the book?” | ambivalence is many things at once, ambiguity is not being able to determine what the opinion or meaning is | |
Analogy | a comparison between two unlike things that explains their relation to teach other and emphasizes similarities | Finding a lost dog is like finding a needle in a haystack | explains much more than a metaphor to discuss why the comparison is being made more for logical explanations | |
Anaphora | A device that uses the repetition of words or phrases at the start of sentences | “Let freedom ring from Georgia. Let freedom ring from the Appalachians” | Repetition of phrases, but only at the start! Kind of syntax | |
Antithesis tricky tricky | literary device that places opposite words, ideas, or qualities parallel to each other to strengthen an argument | Keep your friends close but your enemies closer | contradictory statement parallel structure!!!!!!! that’s the key!! When the rich wage war its the poor who die parallel structure!!!!!!!!! rich adn poor are opposites! ahhh | diff from oxymoron, this contrast makes sense!! |
Aphorism | concise phrase used to describe a customary truth about life, device | Don’t judge a book by its cover The pen is mightier than the sword | can have negative connotations usually metaphorical | Not an idiom because those can’t be literal, while these can and aphorisms are universal while idioms are cultural |
Assonance | A device that uses the repetition of vowel sounds, usually stressed, in words that are close together to create rhythm | Stem end and blossom tend His tender heir might bear his memory | Similar vowel sounds | Consonance with consonants; alliteration is either vowel or consonant |
Asyndeton | absence of conjunctions between parts of a sentence | I came I saw I conquered I made you my temple, my mural, my sky | ||
Chiasmus | A device that repeats grammar constructions or words and phrases in reverse order | “who dotes, yet doubts, suspects, yet strongly loves” “All for one and one for all” | Watch for sentence structure | Parallelism and anaphora are often confused with it because of syntax usage |
Claim | an assertion that something is the case; a thesis that guides writing and declares the essay’s focus | “we live in a time of great change” | No facts or evidence yet, just a thesis | |
Clause | a unit of grammatical organization; can be independent or dependent | |||
Colloquialism | not formal diction, used in familiar conversations and not meant to be taken literally | Hit the hay Yo | Often in dialogue, slang, cultural expressions, idioms | |
Connotation | The implied emotional meaning of a word beyond its literal definition | Home has a connotation of warmth and family and it literally means a place people live in Snake = betrayal | watch for tone surrounding the word | Denotation is the actual definition |
Consonance | A device that uses the repetition of consonant sounds in words close together to create rhythm | “I have been one acquainted with the night” | Similar consonant sounds | Assonance with vowels, alliteration with both |
Denotation | The literal meaning of a word | Rose= not love, but a flower Snake= a reptile, not betrayal | ||
Diction | word choice that influences tone and style | Formal diction can be using commence instead of begin | Watch for how certain words add to description | never say just diction!! |
Didactic | A work such as a novel or tale that is intended to teach, especially when teaching moral instructions as an ulterior motive | Aesop’s fables that often have a hidden moral | Find it by considering if there is a message | allegory is : a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning |
Euphemism | device that uses the substitution of unpleasant or offensive phrase for something more agreeable and pleasing | passed away instead of dead | ||
Evidence | The available body of facts or info indicating whether a belief or claim is true | must be relevant to thesis, usually a quote | ||
Hyperbole | an extravagant exaggeration used to emphasize a point | so hungry i could eat a horse | ||
Idiom | an expression whose meaning is not literal, no underlying message though | he spilled the beans raining cats and dogs | generally cultural | |
Imagery | device that uses vivid descriptions that use all five senses to describe | as she walked through the wintery woods, her teeth chattered and the leaves crunched underfoot | can be auditory, olfactory, gustatory, tactile, and visual | |
Imply | to express, suggest, or insinuate something without a direct statement | Its getting late implies that they want to leave | ||
Infer | to deduce or conclude from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements and make a well-informed guess | someone eats something and makes a face, can infer they don’t like it | ||
Invective | Insulting, abusive, or highly critical language that is always negative | “You’re afraid of your own shadow | will always be negative, designed to hurt | Criticism is productive and helps, invectice language does not |
Irony | the use of words to signify the opposite of the intended expression as a device | A fire truck on fire What a beautiful day when its raining | Usually funny ,spot the opposite of the situation or something funny | |
Juxtaposition | the fact of two things being seen or placed close together with a contrasting effect | enter and do not enter sign right next to each other night and day | don’t have to be opposite | |
Litotes | understatement in which an affirmative is expressed b the negative of the contrary | I’ve had worse You won’t be sorry means you’ll be glad | ||
Loose sentence | a sentence in which the independent clause comes first and continues with more modifiers and subordinate clauses | We reached Paris, after a turbulent flight and exciting experiences, like ice cream… | ||
Metaphor | a comparison not using like or as to compare very unlike objects and suggest a relationship | heart of gold she’s a night owl eyes are a window to the soul | not as deatield or extensive as analogies very different things are being compared | |
Motif | device, noticeable and important recurring thematic element, especially a main idea or central theme | Romeo and Juliet has light and darkness Yellow brick road in oz | relates to motive of the passage, appears repeatedly to emphasize the idea | not theme, leads to the theme instead |
Onomatopoeia | a word being formed from a sound something makes, sound descriptors | boom, zap The leaves crunched underfoot. | ||
Oxymoron | A device that uses two words with opposite meanings in conjunction to express something, oftentimes creating paradoxes and contradictions | “She was pretty ugly” Parting is such sweet sorrow | Weird combo of words | Paradoxes are meant for deeper thought; juxtaposition is more involved and lengthy |
Paradox | a self-contradictory statement that provokes deep though, device | time travel This statement is false. The only rule is there are no rules. | logical arguments that lead to absurd conclusions | not like oxymoron because those make no sense and these make you think hard |
Parallelism | A device that uses the repetition of grammatical structure in a piece of writing, not necessarily the same words or phrase | “One small step for man, one great leap for mankind” | Usual formula of Adjective + noun+ preposition repeated Uses syntax | Not like chiasmus (doesn’t reverse) |
Parody | strategy; funny or exaggerated copy of a book song, movies that mimics the orignal in a silly way for entertainment, not to make a serious point | Pride and Prejudice and Zombies | never serious, just pokes fun!! | |
Pedantic | Giving too much attention to formal rules or small and irrelevant details, overly specific form of diction | An astounding amount of detail about a rose garden that has no symbolism or hidden meaning in a text | Strangely concentrated focus on insignificant details or overly repetitive phrases that add little meaning | |
Periodic sentence | a sentence that leaves the independent clause for last to create suspense | In spite of heavy snow, the game continued. | ||
Personification | A device that attributes human characteristics to something nonhuman, or the representation of an abstract quality or idea in human form. | “The sun smiled down at me” | Humanlike actions or characteristics given to a thing that wouldn’t otherwise have them to make them more relatable and connectable | |
Polysyndeton | multiple coordinating conjunctions used together to emphasize | Like, but, or, nor, and (FANBOY) All you are is mean, and a liar, and pathetic, and alone in life | Repetition of conjunctions, unique because its repeated with commas mainly | |
Repetition | repeating of a word or phrase two or more times | i got this i got this i got this | check for anaphora! | |
Sarcasm | the use of irony to mock or convey contempt | asking what movie is being seen while wearing all pink spilling coffee, that went well | different meaning than what is said | diff. from irony because that’s meant to say the opposite, but sarcasm criticizes |
Satire | a strategy, a type of humor that makes fun of people, society, or politics to make a point of problems | political cartoons | entire work! criticizes something major and problematic | |
Syllogism | device, using 2 logical statements to make a sometimes wrong conclusion to argue something | Unicorns can’t fly. I can’t fly. Therefore, I am a unicorn. | don’t have to be true!! form of reasoning | |
Symbol | A thing that represents or stands for something else, primarily when a material object represents an abstract concept or idea. | The dove for peace, black for mourning | ||
Syntax | sentence structure; a set of rules and principles in a language that dictates how phrases and clauses are arranged into sentences | needs subject and verb to be a sentence | ||
Warrant | the assumption that your reader needs to agree with in order to find your evidence strong; conclusion the reader comes to | Not found in the text, it comes from combining thesis and evidence together to make an assumption |