The driving idea of a text.
What is theme?
Something that stand for something larger.
What is symbolism?
These are the three pieces that should be included in an introduction.
What are a hook, background, and thesis?
A work of literature which is not true.
What is fiction?
An intentionally exaggerated figure of speech.
What is a hyperbole?
The most intense moment in a story.
What is climax?
The giving of clues to hint at something still to come.
What is foreshadowing?
These are the five things that need to be included in a narrative.
What are a clear beginning, middle and end.
A conflict.
Dialogue.
Night was an example of this type of literature in which someone describes a period of their own life.
What is a memoir?
Giving living qualities to a non-living thing.
What is personification?
Time and place of the story.
What is the setting?
A return to an earlier time in a story to give prior information.
What is flashback?
What is two?
Literature written to be performed.
What is a drama?
A comparison not using like or as.
What is a metaphor?
The events following the climax of a story.
What is resolution or falling action?
The opposite of what is expected.
What is irony?
This is the format that should be used to construct thesis statements.
What is cause and effect format.
A fourteen line poem written in iambic pentameter with a strict rhyme scheme?
What is a sonnet?
Words that mimic the sound they are describing.
What is onomatopoeia?
The first part of plot.
What is exposition?
Typically used in drama, a long speech in which a character is alone on stage.
What is a soliloquy?
These are the three elements that should be included in a conclusion.
What are: Rephrase thesis.
Summarize your main points.
Go beyond.
Literature which plot cannot occur in the real world. Typically contains witchcraft or magic.
What is fantasy?