Literary Terms-1
Literary Terms-2
Literary Terms-3
Literary Terms-4
Literary Terms-5
100

This occurs when a statement or situation means something different from (or the opposite of) what is expected.

Irony

100

The order of words in a sentence

syntax

100

Civil war, old news, awfully good, deafening silence. 

Oxymoron

100

The highest point of intensity in a story.

climax

100

“Good food. Good cheer. Good times" and "We came, we saw, we conquered."

Anaphora

200

Making fun of a human practice with the aim of correcting behavior

satire

200

Boom, meow, boing, pitter-patter, zap!

Onomatopoeia

200

The duck said to the bartender, "Put it on my bill."

pun

200

A technique used in which a writer will plant clues or subtle indications about events that will happen later in the narrative.

Foreshadowing

200

Purposeful omission of conjunctions: "He was a bag of bones, a floppy doll, a broken stick, a maniac."

Asyndeton

300

The implied attitude of the writer toward the subject or the audience.

Tone

300

I waited in line for a hundred years.

Hyperbole

300

A narration or description in which events, actions, characters, settings or objects represent specific abstractions or ideas. 

Allegory

300

The insight about life that is revealed in a literary work.

Theme

300

A question asked merely for effect with no answer expected.

Rhetorical question

400

"You have to be cruel to be kind," "Less is more," and "You have to spend money to make money" are all examples of this. 

Paradox

400

A recurring idea, object, concept, or structure that serves to unify a work. 

Motif

400

Ten tired turtles on a tuttle-tuttle tree.

Alliteration

400

In drama, words spoken so that only the audience and/or certain character(s) can hear

Aside

400

“I wore a sweater, and a hat, and a scarf, and a pair of boots, and mittens.”

Polysyndeton

500

A character that by contrast underscores or enhances the distinctive characteristics of another.

Foil

500

A type of poem that does not have any regular, recurring pattern of rhythm or rhyme.

Free verse

500

Freedom weeps, wrong rules the land, and waiting justice sleeps

Personification

500

A reference to a person, place, or other literary work: In the movie “Hook,” Peter Pan (Robin Williams) says, “What is this, some sort of the Lord of the Flies pre-school?”

Allusion

500

Substitution of a pleasant-sounding description for a more direct one

Euphemism

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