The message or moral of the story, such as "never give up" or "take your time and do things right," is also known as?
Theme
A setting is defined by what two concepts?
Time and Place
The main problem or hardship(s) faced by a character or characters.
Conflict
Hinting at something to come later on...such as a crow flying by or someone feeling concerned
Foreshadowing
The two types of conflict (must give an example of each, too)
Internal and External
The overall feeling/atmosphere felt by readers in reading a story, described with words like "cheerful," "angry," "calm," "peaceful," etc...
Mood
Characters conversing/speaking with one another, often marked with quotations, is known as?
Dialogue
How everything shapes out in the end - where the problem is finally concluded
Resolution
The word choice used to create certain feelings/imagery
Diction
The main character (often the good guy) and their opponent (often a bad guy) are known as ____ and ____, respectively. (give an example for each!)
Protagonist and Antagonist
What actually happens in a story - the cause and effect sequence of events from start to finish
Plot
The person telling the story
Narrator
The peak, intense moment of a story - what everything has been building up to, the final battle, confrontation, moment of self-discovery
Climax
Language that paints a picture in the reader's mind
Descriptive/figurative/sensory
Characters that are not the main characters, but can still impact the plot (give an example from any book/tv show/movie)
Secondary Characters
The author's attitude towards a story, often described with words such as "aggressive," "comical," "negative," "excited," "light-hearted," sincere," etc...
Tone
The building of a character based on what they say, do, think, feel, look like, and impact others in order to establish who the character is and perhaps demonstrate a theme
Characterization
The build up of a story - the bubbling of problems and interactions that lead to a big moment.
Rising actions
When the unexpected happens (dramatic or situational)
Irony
Shifts in time between present and pst when a character thinks about/recalls something from their past is known as?
The general type of the literary work such as "action, science fiction, fantasy, romance, etc..."
Genre
The point of view of a story told by a person uninvolved in the story with pronouns such as "they, he, and she."
Second Person
Draw the shape of a plot diagram.
_/\_
The feeling/build up of anticipation, excitement, and uncertainty by an author towards some event that may happen. It helps to keep readers' interests.
Suspense
The act by a reader of guessing/anticipating what is to come in the story based on what they have read so far.
Inferencing