someone who tells a story
a narrator
What type of antagonist?
Sometimes, they’re just a character whose actions are in direct conflict with the protagonist’s unintentionally
the conflict-creator
the most intense part of your story
climax
a tool used to encourage tension and feelings of foreboding in the reader
suspense
What is your student teachers name?
Mme. Jayanna (please, please know this..!!!!!)
The character is telling their OWN story,
they will use ‘I’ often
first person
one dimensional character with only one distinguishable characteristic
flat character
where all conflict is resolved
the resolution
What kind of irony?
When what happens is not what should happen
situational irony
the setting of a story is made up of
time and place
this narrator follows 1 (or 2)characters and they only know what that person is thinking
external limited
a multi-dimensional character with many characteristics a reader discovers throughout the story
a round character
this part of the story builds tension and anticipation
rising action
the overall feeling of the work
the mood
when a villain redeems himself before the end of a story
a redemption arc
the ‘god’ narrator - can switch which character is being followed. Knows what everyone is thinking and feeling.
external omniscient
a ______ character makes a change or obvious decision throughout the story
dynamic
the type of ending with no resolution
a cliffhanger
the author’s attitude towards a certain thing or subject
the tone
The name of the protagonist in 'The Mountain Legend'
Jason
The Character is telling someone else’s
story, as if they saw it happen
third person
a character that does not change throughout the story
a static character
the part of a story that first highlights your characters, setting and conflict
exposition
What kind of irony is demonstrated in the following example?
A woman thinks her boyfriend is acting strangely because he's about to propose, but the audience knows that he is planning to run away with another woman, intensifying emotions
Dramatic irony
dialogue is a literary term for
conversation