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Lit Terms Handbook Flash

Terms

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Aphorism
a brief saying embodying a moral concise statement of a principle or precept given out in pointed words. EX: \"Lord what fools these mortals be\"
Analogy
an inference that if things agree in some respects they probably agree in others.
Anecdote
A short account of a particular incident or event of an interesting or amusing nature.
Allegory
a narrative in which characters, action, and sometimes setting represent abstract concepts or moral qualities. EX: The Divine Comedy is an allegory where a literal journey symbolizes a man\'s struggle for redemption.
Alliteration
When several words begin with the same letter or sound EX: \"The Soul Selects her own Society\"
Allusion
make a more or less disguised reference to; \"He alluded to the problem but did not mention it\"
Apostrophe
a figure of speech in which someone absent or dead or something nonhuman is addressed as if it were alive and present and was able to reply.
Assonance
Rhyming repetition in multiple vowels in a sentence or phrase.
Cacophony
an unpleasant mixture of multiple sounds.
Connotations and Denotations
denotation: a literal meaning of the word Connotation: an association (emotional or otherwise) which the word evokes
Couplet
A pair of rhyming lines written in the same meter. EX: \"Good night, good night! Parting is such a sweet sorrow that I shall say good night till it be morrow\"
Double Entendre
A french pphrase for the word \"double meaning\" used to denote a pun with a 2nd usually sexual meaning.
Epic
The story of a hero who overcomes goals or obstacles in battles or a great journey.
Flashback
When a memory or past event is revisited
Epithet
A characterizing word or phrasee accompanying or occurring in the place of the name or thing.
Epic Hero
The central figure in a long narrative who possess larger -than-life qualities such as bravery, loyalty, and heroism.
Foreshadowing
To indicate something beforehand
Euphemism
A nicer way to say something offensive. EX: \"I\'m going to have to let you go\" instead of \"You\'re fired\".
Hyperbole
an extravagant exaggeration
Hubris
to have excessive pride or overbearing arrogance
Foil
A foil is a person that contrasts with another character (usually the protagonist) in order to highlight various features of the main character\'s personality
Epigraph
a quotation set at the beginning of a piece of writing
Epiphany
A sudden revelation
Euphony
an agreeable sound reflected in the phonetic quality of poetic words.
Paradox
A statement that contradicts itself.
Tone
A quality that reveals the attitude and presuppositions of the author.
Pun
A play on words. EX: \"People are dying to get in to the cemetery\"
Irony: Situational
when something happens that seems surprising or unlikely
Dramatic Irony
when the reader knows something that the character doesn\'t
verbal irony
when a character means to say one thing but it\'s heard by others as something different.
Symbolism
The use of specific objects or images to represent abstract ideas.
Synecdoche
A figure of speech that is part of the whole used to describe the whole.
Oxymoron
Conjoining contradictory terms
Understatement
A figure of speech that says less than what is indicated.
Tragic Hero
A main character that makes a mistake and ends up defeated
Simile
A figure of speech that better describes something by comparing it to something else using \"like\" or \"as\"
metonymy
A figure of speech that substitutes something closely related for the thing actually meant
Meter
The rhymical pattern of a poem.
Scansion
examining the meter of a poem
Rhyme scheme
The pattern of rhyming lines in a poem or song
metaphor
A literary device that takes a word or sentence and changes it into something else
Tragedy
A type of literature describing the destruction of a noble or outstanding person.
Soliloquy
A speech made by an actor while alone on stage, revealing thoughts
Motif
A recurring or dominant element
Malapropism
the unintentional misuse of a word by confusion with one that sounds similar
Myth
a legendary or traditional story, usually one concerning a superhuman being and dealing with events that have no natural explanation.
Onomatopoeia
using words that imitate the sound they denote
Parable
a brief, succinct story, in prose or verse, that illustrates a moral or religious lesson.
personification
the act of attributing human characteristics to abstract ideas etc.
Rhetorical question
a statement that is formulated as a question but that is not supposed to be answered
sonnet
Fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in iambic pentameter.
theme
a unifying idea that is a recurrent element in literary or artistic work

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