Plot/Setting
Conflict
Character
Style Part 1
Style Part 2
100

the most common type of narrative order in children's books - the events are told in the order that they happen 

chronological 

100

when the protagonist is threatened by an element of nature 

character vs. nature 

100

the main character 


the person or force working against the main character 

protagonist


antagonist

100

The author’s underlying message (universal truth/lesson) about life or human nature.

Theme

100

uses words in a non-literal way (examples: simile, metaphor, idiom, hyperbole, etc.)

figurative language

200

the event that starts the action

inciting incident 

200

when the protagonist is in conflict with the values of his or government or a group of people 

character vs. society 

200

1. when the author reveals a character's personality, attitude or feelings through five methods 


2. when the author goes right out and tells the reader about a character's attitude or feelings 

indirect characterization


direct characterization 

200

it is an appeal to the five senses—taste, touch, sight, sound, and smell.  It paints a picture in our minds.

Imagery

200

1. shows the author’s attitude toward the subject, characters, and events. (text)

2. the climate or feeling in a literary work that the reader feels. (me)


Tone


Mood 

300

these two elements occur when:


story skips a period of time that seems unusual compared to the rest of the plot 

the author narrates an event that took place before the current time of the story 



time lapse

flashback

300

when the protagonist is in conflict with any force outside of human control

character vs. supernatural 

300

1. a character who is one- sided and often a stereotyped character


2. fully developed character who exhibits many traits

flat


round

300

Explain the difference between irony and coincidence

Situational Irony —the unexpected twist; when the opposite of what is logically expected to happen actually occurs (not necessarily a plot twist, but any event occurring on the plot line).

Coincidence —something which happens by chance. (sometimes confused with irony)

300

hints about what will happen later in the story.

foreshadowing

400

setting that is relatively unimportant to the plot 


type of setting that is essential to the plot 

backdrop


integral

400

takes place within a characters mind

internal conflict 

400

1. a character who remains the same, or changes very little


2. a character who changes in some important way as a result of what happens 

static


dynamic

400

List the 3 main types of POV and explain their definition (the third type has 3 types)

1st person- the narrator uses "I" 

2nd person- author speaks directly to the reader using the word "you"

3rd person limited/omniscient/objective- limited is thoughts of one character, omniscient is thoughts of all characters, objective is is factual

400

a person, object, situation, or action that stands for something in addition to itself.

Symbol

500
Draw a plot mountain with all of the elements included. (six elements) 

exposition, inciting incident, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution 

500

takes place between a character and some opposing force

external conflict 

500

a character who stands in direct contrast to another and therefore highlights the traits of the first character

character foil

500

List the three types of Irony and their definition

Situational Irony - unexpected twist

Dramatic Irony- reader knows something characters don't

Verbal Irony- sarcasm, or opposite of what is meant

500

List the three different types of written style and define them. 

Standard Written Style - formal way of writing

Conversational Style- language is more informal

Eye Dialect- words are spelled the way they sound (accents)

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