Poetry
Author's Tools
Literary Genres
Figurative Language
Miscellaneous
100

A group of lines in a poem

Stanza

100

who the character is, what they do in the story, and how they've changed

Characterization

100

a story, actual or fictional, expressed orally or in text

Narrative

100

Comparing two unlike things NOT using the words, "like," "as," or "than" (ex. Life is a game.)

Metaphor

100

a word that is similar in meaning to another word (ex. excellent and wonderful)

Synonym

200

the repetition of identical or similar sounds at the end of words (ex. the cat in the hat)

Rhyme

200

the use of people, places, things or events that stand for both itself and for something beyond itself

Symbol

200

a written account of another person's life

Biography

200

Comparing two unlike things using the words, "like" or "as" or "than" (ex. He was as fast as a cheetah.)

Simile

200

a word that has the opposite meaning to another word (ex. hot and cold)

Antonym

300

the repetition of sounds at the beginning of words (ex. Peter Piper picked a pickled pepper.)

Alliteration

300
a feeling of anxious curiosity about what is going to happen next in a story

Suspense

300

an opinionated news article

editorial
300

An extreme exaggeration or overstatement (ex. It's raining cats and dogs!)

Hyperbole

300

personal point of view relates events as they are perceived by a single character; words like "I," "my" and "we" are used

First Person

400

a 3 line poem with 5 syllables in the first line, 7 syllables in the second line, and 5 syllables in the last line; usually about nature

Haiku

400

an author's specific choice of words

Diction

400

a literary approach that ridicules or examines human weakness (ex. Saturday Night Live)

Satire

400

A word whose pronunciation matches it meaning (ex. buzz, hiss, boom)

Onomatopoeia

400

a variety of language distinct from the standard variety in pronunciation, grammar, or vocabulary (ex. Yous gonna git some cheesesteaks?)

Dialect

500

a traditional poem that tells a story, often sung

Ballad

500

the specific ordering of words to form phrases and sentences

Syntax

500

a form of extended metaphor in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative are equated with meanings that lie outside the narrative; the underlying meanings have moral, social, religious, or political significance (ex. Animal Farm, The Sneetches)

Allegory

500
Giving human qualities to something that is not human (ex. The moon smiled at me.)

Personification

500

a character that symbolically embodies well-known meanings and basic human experiences, regardless of when/where he/she lives 

Universal Character

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