Figurative Language and Literary Terms
Story Structure
Literary Elements
Name that term!
Spelling Bee
100

Repetition of beginning sounds in nearby words

Alliteration

100

Conflict builds and characters struggle

Rising Action

100

When and where a story takes place

Setting

100

“Her voice was like music.”

Simile

100

Spell this word meaning nonsense or silly talk

Balderdash

200

Comparison using “like” or “as”

Simile

200

Final outcome of the story

Resolution

200

An object that represents a larger idea

Symbolism

200

“The leaves danced in the wind.”

Personification

200

Spell this word meaning “a noisy argument”

Kerfuffle

300

Direct comparison; one thing is another

Metaphor

300

Events begin to wrap up

Falling Action

300

Hints about future events

Foreshadowing

300

“The prince drove his 24k gold-plated Ferrari  in the slums of Evermania."

Juxtaposition

300

Spell this word meaning “the fear of running out of things to read”

Abibliophobia

400

Giving human qualities to non-human things

Personification

400

Introduces characters and setting

Exposition

400

Part A: The feeling created for the reader.

Part B: Speaker’s attitude toward the subject

Part A: Mood

Part B: Tone

400

“The cold air stung my face, and snow crunched underfoot.”

Imagery

400

Spell this word meaning “extremely talkative”

Loquacious

500

Language that appeals to the senses.

Imagery

500

Turning point; highest tension

Climax

500

Highlights differences between two ideas that also complement each other

Juxtaposition

500

“The world is a stage.”

Metaphor

500

Spell this word meaning “fear of long words” (ironically)

Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia

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