A comparison using 'like' or 'as.
Simile.
Aggressive and abusive language.
Invective language.
Where your eye goes. Attention-grabbing part of an image.
Salience
Lines that lead the viewer's eye in a direction.
Vectors.
Mr. Rooke's least favourite animal
Moth
A comparisons saying something is something else.
Metaphor.
How certain and definite language is.
Modality.
Front of image; back of image.
Foreground and background
The perspective an image is 'from'.
Point of view.
Mr. Rooke's least favourite 'type' of animal
Dinosaurs
The ending sounds of words sounding similar.
Rhyme.
How formal or informal language is.
Register.
An image being even on both sides.
Symmetry.
How see-through part of an image is.
Opacity.
Mr. Rooke's favourite 'type' of animal
Camelids (camels, llamas, alpacas)
Repeating consonant sounds (e.g. b, d, f).
Alliteration.
Something being unclear in a text. Multiple potential meanings.
Ambiguity.
The mood and feeling of an image. Often established through weather and lighting.
Atmosphere.
Two different elements of an image being right next to each other.
Juxtaposition.
Mr. Rooke's second favourite animal
Saiga antelope
Repeating vowel sounds (e.g. a, i, e).
Assonance.
A text referencing another text, historical event, or person. Usually indirectly.
Allusion.
Difference. Different parts of an image in comparison to each other.
Contrast.
When part of an image represents something else (an emotion, an idea, etc.)
Symbolism.
Mr. Rooke's favourite animal
Crow