What is plot?
"The use of specific descriptive language that creates a picture in the reader's mind."
What is imagery?
"An educated guess based on prior/background knowledge and textual evidence."
What is an inference?
"The order of rhyme patterns at the ends of lines in poems."
What is rhyme scheme?
Found at the end of a written text and listed using MLA format in alphabetical order.
What is the Work's Cited page?
"Exposition, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, Resolution"
What are the elements of plot?
"A material object that represents an idea"
What is a symbol?
"Repeating words, phrases, sounds, information within a text for emphasis"
What is repetition?
An example of __________.
"Nature's first green is gold, A
Her hardest hue to hold. A
Her early leaf's a flower; B
But only so an hour. B
What is rhyme scheme?
These citations belong in the text that is written and point to a source on the work's cited page.
What are in-text citations?
"How the narrator tells the story."
What is point of view?
"The repetition of the initial consonant sounds, words found near each other in a text."
What is alliteration?
"a version of a metaphor that extends over the course of a stanzas, lines, or paragraphs, and may be found in prose and poetry."
What is an extended metaphor?
"A comparison using like or as"
What is a simile?
What are sources?
"Point of view that uses I, me, my, and we."
What is first person point of view?
"Figurative language that gives human characteristics to nonhuman objects, animals, or ideas"
What is personification?
What is universal theme?
"A direct comparison that DOES NOT use like or as"
What is a metaphor?
Information that tells an actor what to do on stage
What are stage directions?
"Point of view that uses he, she, it, and they"
What is third person point of view?
"In literature it is the opposite result from what we expect; there is a "twist" in the outcome of the story."
What is irony?
"The author's reason for writing"
What is author's purpose?
What is mood?
"These sources include eye witness accounts, government documents, newspapers, photographs, and artifacts about a person or event."
What are primary sources?