Terms
Terms
Terms
Terms
Terms
100

Allegory 

An allegory is a simple story that

represents a larger point about

society or human nature, whose

different characters may represent

real-life figures

100

Allusion

This is basically a reference to

something else. It’s when a writer

mentions some other piece of work, or

refers to an earlier part of the story.

100

FABLE

Derived from the Latin word fibula,

which means “a story,” and a

derivative of the word fari, which

means “to speak.”

100

Archetype

A character who represents a

certain type of person. For

example, Daniel Boone is an

archetype of the early

American frontiersman.

100

Assonance

The repetition of vowel

sounds as in “Days wane

away.”

200

Atmosphere

The overall feeling of a work,

which is related to tone and

mood.

200

Blank verse

Unrhymed lines of poetry

usually in iambic pentameter.

Plenty of modern poetry is

written in blank verse.

200

Characterization

The means by which an

author establishes character.

An author may directly

describe the appearance and

personality of character or

show it through action or

dialogue.

200

Climax

The point at which the action

in a story or play reaches its

emotional peak.

200

Conflict

The elements that create a plot.

Traditionally, every plot is build

from the most basic elements of

a conflict and an eventual

resolution. The conflict can be

internal (within one character) or

external (among or between

characters, society, and/or

nature).

300

Couplets

A pair of rhyming lines in a

poem often set off from the

rest of the poem.

Shakespeare’s sonnets all

end in couplets.

300

Denouement

The resolution of the conflict in a

plot after the climax. It also

refers to the resolution of the

action in a story or play after the

principal drama is resolved—in

other words, tying up the loose

ends or wrapping up a story.

300

Dramatic Monologue

A poem with a fictional

narrator addressed to

someone who identity the

audience knows, but who

does not say anything.

300

Elegy

A poem mourning the dead.

300

End rhyme

Rhyming words that are at

the ends of their respective

lines—what we typically

think of as normal rhyme.

400

Epic

A long poem narrating the

adventures of a heroic

figure—for example, Homer’s

The Odyssey.

400

Fable

A story that illustrates a

moral often using animals as

the character—for example,

The Tortoise and the Hare.

400

Figurative Language

Language that does not mean

exactly what it says. For

example, you can call

someone who is very angry

“steaming.” Unless steam

was actually coming out of

your ears, you were using

figurative language.

400

First Person Point of View

The point of view of writing

which the narrator refers to

himself as “I.”

400

Foreshadowing

A technique in which an author

gives clues about something

that will happen later in the

story.

500

Free Verse

Poetry with no set

meter (rhythm) or

rhyme scheme.

500

Genre

A kind of style usually art or

literature. Some literary genres

are mysteries, westerns, and

romances.

500

Hyperbole

A huge exaggeration. For

example, “Dan’s the funniest

guy on the planet!” or “That

baseball card is worth a zillion

dollars!”

500

Iambic pentameter

Ten-syllable lines in which

every other syllable is

stressed. For example: “With

eyes like stars upon the brave

night air.”

500

Imagery

The use of description that helps

the reader imagine how

something looks, sounds, feels,

smells, or taste. Most of the

time, it refers to appearance.

For example, “The young bird’s

white, feathered wings flutter as

he made his way across the

nighttime sky.”

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