An intentional, obvious, and vivid exaggeration used for emphasis or rhetorical effect rather than literal truth.
Hyperbole
The use of old-fashioned, outdated words or sentence structures that are no longer common in modern English.
Archaic Language
The specific text type, shape, or medium that a piece of writing takes.
Form
A forceful, hostile, or attacking tone.
Aggressive
Descriptive language that appeals to the reader's sense of hearing.
Auditory Imagery
A literary device where non-human things, ideas, or animals are given human attributes, emotions, or actions.
Personification
Formally structured, sophisticated word choice and high-level vocabulary used to assert authority, evoke respect, or empower an audience.
Elevated Diction
The broad category, style, or classification of a text determined by its technique, tone, and content.
Genre
An objective, emotionless, and purely analytical or factual tone that distances the writer from the subject matter.
Detached / Clinical
Descriptive language that appeals to the reader's sense of taste (often paired with olfactory/smell imagery).
Gustatory Imagery
A contrast between expectation and reality, such as when the actual outcome of a situation is the exact opposite of what was expected, or when words express something different from their literal meaning.
Irony
Language or word forms used to denote smallness, youth, or unimportance, sometimes carrying a tone of condescension or affection.
Diminutive Language
A nonfiction account of a person's life experiences written by that person themselves
Autobiography
A deeply serious, formal, and dignified tone, often touching on grave, honest, or morally weighty matters.
Solemn
The deliberate presentation of something as being much smaller, worse, or less important than it actually is; the direct opposite of hyperbole.
Understatement
The intentional repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses, sentences, or lines to build rhythm and emphasis.
Anaphora
The use of pronouns like "we" and "our" to foster a sense of inclusivity, unity, and shared identity between the speaker and the audience.
First-Person Plural
A peer-reviewed, highly formal, and heavily researched periodic publication intended for a scholarly or professional audience.
Academic Journal
The author's underlying attitude toward their subject matter, conveyed through their specific word choices and stylistic stance.
Tone
Language that creates vivid mental pictures not through literal description, but through figurative comparisons to represent actions, preparation, or abstract states.
Metaphorical Imagery
A statement or proposition that seems self-contradictory or absurd but in reality expresses a possible truth.
Paradox
A mild, vague, or indirect expression substituted for a word or phrase considered harsh, blunt, or unpleasant.
Euphemism
A genre of writing designed to blend informative content with persuasive, highly descriptive language to market a destination, product, or experience to potential customers.
Promotional Feature
An attitude characterized by a general distrust of others' motives, or a pessimistic outlook on events and human nature.
Cynical
A writing principle that suggests things that come in threes are inherently more satisfying, impactful, and memorable to the reader.
Triadic Structure