Figurative language 1
Figurative language 2
Narrator 1
British Literature 1
100

A comparison using like or as

Simile

100

A comparison NOT using like or as

Metaphor

100

True or false:  an audiobook does not have a narrator.

FALSE. NO ONE SHOULD GET THIS WRONG.

100

Writer of Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, and more

William Shakespeare

200

An over exaggeration (blowing things out of proportion)

Hyperbole

200

Given non human objects human qualities

Personification

200

Most novels/literature (not all but most) are narrated in which person

Third person

200

The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (Knight's Tale) was written in which time period?

Medieval time period/Middle English 

300

Repetition of sounds repeating

Alliteration

300

Contradictory statement (example:  pretty ugly)

Oxymoron

300

The all seeing narrator (all seeing eyes) that seems to know everything about a story

Omniscient narrator

300

Works such as Pride and Prejudice and Frankenstein by Mary Shelley were written in which timeframe

Romantic/regency era
400

Words imitating sound is called

Onomatopoeia

400

Categories in literature and movies etc (mediums) example:  (Rebel, hero, villain, leader)

Archetype

400

A narrator who tells a story through one single point of view is called which kind of narrator

Limited narrator

400

Beowulf was written during this time period

Anglo Saxon time period

500

Making a reference from literary mediums in every day life (example:  Chocolate is her Achilles Heel)

Allusion

500

Literal story versus symbolic meaning

Allegory

500

This type of narrator in a story is one you are not sure you believe/trust

Unreliable narrator

500
The author of Beowulf

No one.  Anonymous

M
e
n
u