Terms - Definition
Terms in the Wild
Terms in the Wild (2)
Drama
Misc. Stories
100

A comparison of two things, NOT using "like" or "as"

metaphor

100

What literary device is used:

"He was like a delicate flower"

Simile

100

This pencil represents learning and creativity. This pencil is a _____.

symbol

100

These instructions typically appear in brackets and tell actors what to do in a given scene.

Stage directions
100

The two musical artists Marjane gets posters of from Turkey.

Kim Wilde and Iron Maiden

200

An extreme exaggeration 

hyperbole

200

What literary device is being used:

"The foaming waves roared and crashed violently against the rocky shoreline."

imagery

200

"She was the Shakespeare of her English class."

Allusion/Metaphor

200

Two or more characters are having a conversation with each other.

dialogue
200

What the boys use to start the signal fire in Lord of the Flies.

Piggy's glasses

300
A story hinting at an event occurring before it actually happens.

foreshadowing

300

What literary device is used in the scenario below:

The actress poisons the stranger's drink, not knowing that the stranger is her mother. The audience is aware of the stranger's identity.

dramatic irony

300

"Death greeted her as she walked through the door"

Personification

300

The character speaks at length to another character.

monologue

300

John Proctor does not want to give this up at the end of The Crucible.

His name/reputation 


“Because it is my name! Because I cannot have another in my life! Because I lie and sign myself to lies! Because I am not worth the dust on the feet of them that hang! How may I live without my name? I have given you my soul; leave me my name!”

400

A reference to another piece of media within a story.

Allusion

400

The difference between Mood and Tone.

Mood --> the feeling the READER gets from a story

Tone --> the WRITER'S feeling about the topic

400

"My backpack weighs a ton"

Hyperbole

400

A form of a language in which an author writes their dialogue; determines how the characters speak.

For example, if a character is a cowboy, he might say "Howdy y'all" instead of "Hi everybody"

dialect

400

The two characters from this year who died via rock.

Piggy & Giles

500

Four types of conflict.

Man vs. Nature

Man vs. Self

Man. vs. Society

Man vs. Man

500

Literary device:

The pilot in the story has a fear of heights. 

situational irony

500

Type of conflict:

"He attempted to light a fire, but his hands were so cold that he could barely use them."

Man vs. Nature

500

An event that hooks the viewer into the story and sets everything else that happens into motion

inciting incident

500

The author of School Days of an Indian Girl.

Zitkala-Ša

M
e
n
u