Literary Terms-A
Literary Terms-B
Literary Terms-C
Literary Terms-D
Literary Terms-E
100

The sequence of events in a story. This includes the opening event, the rising action, the climax, the falling action and the resolution.

What is plot?

100

The means through which an author reveals a character's personality.

What is characterization?

100

The main or central character of a work of literature.

What is a protagonist?

100

The comparison of two unlike things to illuminate a particular quality or aspect of one of those things. For example, "Karen was a ray of sunshine."

What is metaphor?

100

The use of words whose sounds imitate the sounds of what they describe, such as hiss, murmur, growl, honk, buzz, woof, etc. 

What is onomatopoeia?

200

The opponent or enemy of the main character.

What is antagonist?

200

The time and place of a story.

What is setting?

200

The perspective from which the story is told.

What is point of view?

200

Language that portrays sensory experiences, or experiences of the five senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch.

What is imagery?

200

Describing nonhuman animals, objects, or ideas as though they possess human qualities or emotions. For example: "The moon smiled down on her."

What is personification?

300

When two or more words in a group of words begin with the same sound. For example: Fred's frozen french fries.

What is alliteration?

300

A reference to another piece of history, art, literature, etc.

What is allusion?

300

Clues or hints about something that is going to happen later in the story. Authors use ________ to build suspense and to prepare the reader for what happens later. 

What is foreshadowing?

300

When two unlike things are compared using like or as. For example, "Randy's voice is like melted chocolate."

What is simile?

300

A story's main message or moral. 

What is theme?

400

A struggle between opposing characters or forces.

What is conflict?

400

A scene in a story that occurred before the present time in the story. _________ provide background information about events happening during the current narration.

What is a flashback?

400

Extreme exaggeration used for emphasis or effect; an extravagant statement that is not meant to be taken literally.

What is hyperbole?

400

The conversation between characters in a work of literature.

What is dialogue?

400

The emotional impact of a word.

What is connotation?

500

An object, setting, event, animal, or person that represents something else (a feeling, etc.). For example, in a story or play, rain could represent sadness or leaving the past behind.

What is a symbol?

500

The author's attitude toward the subject matter or toward the reader or audience. _______ is conveyed through the author's word choices and the details that he or she includes. 

What is tone?

500

The feeling the reader gets from a work of literature. It's the atmosphere that makes you feel a certain way when you "walk into" a story. For example: creepy, calm, romantic, sad, or tense.

What is mood?

500

The dictionary definition of a word.

What is denotation?

500

When the unexpected happens; a strange twist.

Irony

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