Connections Between Text
Common Literary Terms
Ways of Conveying Text
Figures of Speech and Language
Irony and Mistakes
100

Story or poem in which characters, settings, and events stand for other people or events or for abstract ideas or qualities.

Allegory

100

A person, place, thing, or event that has meaning in itself and that also stands for something more than itself.

Symbols

100

A speaker or writer’s choice of words.

Diction

100

The use of language to evoke a picture or a concrete sensation of a person , a thing, a place, or an experience.

Imagery

100

A statement that says less than what is meant.

Understatement

200

A comparison between two things, typically for the purpose of explanation or clarification.

Analogy

200

A recurring image, word, phrase, action, idea, object, or situation used throughout a work.

Motifs

200

A way of speaking that is characteristic of a certain social group or of the inhabitants of a certain geographical area.

Dialect

200

A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable.

Metaphors

200

A statement that appears self-contradictory, but that reveals a kind of truth.

Paradox

300

Used to help the reader make a new, insightful connection between two different entities that might not have seemed related.

Extended Metaphor 

300

Poetic and rhetorical device in which normally unassociated ideas, words, or phrases are placed next to one another, creating an effect of surprise and wit.

Juxtaposition

300

A word or phrase that is not formal or literary, typically one used in ordinary or familiar conversation.

Colloquialism

300

A figure of speech in which an object or animal is given human feelings, thoughts, or attitudes.

Personification

300

When a character in the play or story thinks one thing is true, but the audience or reader knows better.

Dramatic Irony

400

An artistic work in a style that imitates that of another work, artist, or period.

Pastiche

400

Literally means “opposite,” is a rhetorical device in which two opposite ideas are put together in a sentence to achieve a contrasting effect.

Antithesis

400

An idea or feeling that a word invokes in addition to its literal or primary meaning.

Connotation

400

A figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind, used to make a description more emphatic or vivid.

Similes

400

Occurs when someone says one thing but really means something else.

Verbal Irony
500

A work that makes fun of another work by imitating some aspect of the writer’s style.

Parody

500

The way in which words and sentences are placed together.

Syntax

500

The literal or primary meaning of a word, in contrast to the feelings or ideas that the word suggests.

Denotation

500

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.

Hyperbole

500

Takes place when there is a discrepancy between what is expected to happen, or what would be appropriate to happen, and what really does happen.

Situational Irony

M
e
n
u