Figurative Language
Parts of Speech
Literary Analysis Things
The Art of Persuasion
More Figurative Language
100

Repeating consonant sound 

Alliteration

100

Person, place, or thing

Noun

100

The persons in a story

Characters

100

Effective persuasive techniques, often using specific tactics 

Rhetoric

100

The text alludes to or references a famous person, literature, history, mythology

Allusion

200

Compares two things using "like" or "as"

Simile

200

An action word

Verb

200

Can be physical or emotional about the characters--it describes the charcters

Character Traits

200

Appeals to the reader or audience's emotions

Pathos

200

The story can be interpreted to reveal a hidden story, or a deeper meaning. 

Allegory

300

Compares two or more things without using like or as

Metaphor

300

Describes a noun 

Adjective

300

The time and location of where the story takes place. 

Setting

300

Uses authority, credibility, or ethics to persuade

Ethos

300

One thing is said, while another thing is meant

Irony

400

An extreme exaggeration

Hyperbole

400

Connects two or more thoughts in a sentence

Example: and, or, nor, but 

Conjunction

400

The reason the author writes a piece. 

Author's Purpose

400

Uses logic and reason to persuade

Logos

400

 Sarcasm--Verbally said

Verbal Irony

500

Sound Words

Onomatopoeia

500

Takes the place of a noun 

Pronouns

500

The moral or message of a piece of text. 

Theme

500

From which perspective the story is told. 

Point of View

500

The audience or reader knows the outcome, or what is happening in the plot, before the character does. 

Dramatic Irony 

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