It's All in the Syntax
Pretty Lit
Stranger Than Fact
Narrative, Narrative, Narrative
100

repetition of the initial consonant sounds of words: “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers"

alliteration

100

non-literal language that represents one thing in terms of something dissimilar. Similes, metaphors, personification, and hyperbole are all examples of ____________

figurative language

100

extreme exaggeration to add meaning, saying things like “I’m so hungry I could eat a cow,” or “I have a million things to do today.” 

hyperbole

100

character that is the source of conflict in a literary work

antagonist

200

repetition of similar or identical sounds: “look and crook”

rhyme

200

standardized, conventional ideas about characters, plots, and settings

stereotype

200

a statement that appears to be self-contradictory or silly but may include a latent truth: "The way to be safe is never to be secure” or "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others"

paradox

200

The manner in which an author develops characters and their personalities

characterization

300

the use of any element—such as a sound, word, phrase, image, symbol, or sentence—more than once.

repetition

300

a direct comparison of dissimilar objects, usually using like or as: “I wandered lonely as a cloud” or “My siblings fight like cats and dogs”

simile

300

figure of speech in which non-human things are given human characteristics: “The sun smiled on our picnic”

personification

300

the method of returning to an earlier point in time for the purpose of making the present clearer

flashback

400

the use of words to produce mental images of specific sensory experiences (olfactory, gustatory, tactile, visual, auditory, emotional)

imagery

400

when one subject is implied to be another so as to draw a comparison between their similarities and shared traits: “Henry was a lion on the battlefield”; “life is but a dream”

metaphor

400

phrase that consists of two words that are contradictory: “there was a deafening silence” or “There was a cold fire in his eyes”

oxymoron

400

a recurrent image, word, phrase, object, or action that tends to unify the literary work or that may be elaborated into a more general theme. (For example, you might argue that a _____ of birds underscores the theme of yearning for freedom in a text.)

motif

500

the vantage point or perspective from which a literary work is told

point of view

500

the author’s attitude toward a specific character, place, or development. It can portray a variety of emotions ranging from solemn, grave, and critical to witty, wry, and humorous. 

tone

500

a term for situations and for written and spoken observations that suggest some sort of incongruity (discrepancy) between appearance and reality. There are three basic forms of it

irony

500

type or category to which a literary work belongs

genre

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