Poetry
Literary techniques
Fiction
Symbols & Motifs
Miscellaneous
100

What poetic element is represented here?

Thus I; faltering forward,
Leaves around me falling...

What is alliteration?

100

This term refers to a writer's intentional word choice.

What is diction?

100

This refers to a character who grows and changes throughout a text.

What is a dynamic character?

100

This object is from Doll's House, a symbol representing opportunity or the lack of opportunity.  The play ends with a sound of it.

What is a door?

100

This refers to a contrast or discrepancy between what is said and what is meant or between what happens and what is expected to happen in life and in literature.

What is irony?

*Remember:
verbal irony = what is said vs what is meant
dramatic irony: what a character understands vs what the audience knows
situational irony: what happens vs what's expected to happen

200

What poetic device is represented here in the bolded sounds?

Have left me to that solitude, which suits
Abstruser musings: save that at my side...

What is assonance?

200

This term refers to an associated meaning of a word.

What is connotation?

200

This POV is the narrative style where the author knows everything about the characters and situation.  (They use pronouns like he/she/they)

What is third person omniscient?

200

This symbol is prominent in Beloved, symbolizing the Middle Passage.  

What is water?

200
This is the fancy French word for what happens at the end of a plot line, when there's a resolution.

What is denouement?

300

What poetic technique is represented here in the bolded parts of the poem?

Some feel rain. 

Some feel the beetle startle
in its ghost-part when the bark
Slips. 

Some feel musk. Asleep against
each other in the whiskey dark, scarcely there.

What is anaphora?
300

This term refers to a dictionary definition of a word.

What is denotation?

300

This point of view is when the narrator speaks from their own experience and point of view.

What is first person point of view?

300
This term refers to a recurring image or idea, like light and dark in "Sonny's Blues." 

What is a motif?

300

This figure of speech occurs when a writer addresses somebody not physically present or alive.  We see this in Roethke's "Elegy" when he addresses Jane.

What is apostrophe?

400

What do we call the pauses/punctuation in the middle of these lines of poetry?

Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,
That wants it downI could say “Elves” to him,
But it’s not elves exactlyand I’d rather
He said it for himself. I see him there
Bringing a stone grasped firmly by the top
In each hand, like an old-stone savage armed.


What is a ceasura?

400

This term refers to how an author expresses their feelings about their topic or characters.

(It can be nostalgic, adoring, bitter...)

What is tone?

400

This character is one that does not change or grow throughout a text.

What is a static character?

(acceptable, perhaps: what is a flat character?)

400

This symbol in Doll's House - something Nora practices for and that occurs in Act III - represents the tangled "web" of lies Nora in which Nora found herself.

What is the Tarantella?  

400

This term refers to sentence structure.

What is syntax?

500

This type of verse is unrhymed iambic pentameter.

(steady verse with no rhyme)

What is blank verse?

500

This term refers to figurative language in which an inhuman subject is given human attributes or feelings.

What is personification?

500

This terms refers to a character who serves as a contrast to a main character in a text.

(think about Christine Lind and Nora)

What is a character foil?

500
Louise Mallard found herself sitting in front of this symbol as she whispered, "Free!"

What is an open window?

500

This terms refers to a figure of speech in which a part is substituted for the whole. 

An example: "Lend me a hand." 


What is synecdoche?

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