Parts of a Plot
Character Types
Literary Devices
Point of View or Conflict
Miscellaneous
100

Any event that occurs after the turning point but before the end of the story

Falling Action

100

The main character

Protagonist

100

A hint of events to come

Foreshadowing

100

The point of view when the narrator is a character in the story and uses "I/we"

First Person

100

Sydney's favourite video game

Dark Souls

200

The end of the story

Resolution

200

The force against the main character

Antagonist

200

When a character thinks back to an event earlier in the story or before the story began

Flashback

200

An example of this type of conflict is if Logan S is fighting Logan M

person versus person

200

An example of this poetic device is "school is a jail"

Metaphor

300

The turning point in the story when the conflict comes to a head

Climax

300
A character that has the same personality throughout the story; they do not change

Static

300

The message of the story

Theme

300

The point of view when the narrator is not a character, but tells the reader about characters' thoughts/feelings (uses "he/she/they")

Third Person

300

Solve for x:


x - 3 = 9

12

400

When the setting and characters are brought up; the beginning of the story

Introduction/Exposition

400

A character who changes in some important way because of the plot events

Dynamic
400

The overall feeling or atmosphere or a work

Mood

400

An example of this type of conflict is if a character feels pressure to buy things on Black Friday

person versus society

400

An example of this poetic device is, "I'm so hungry, I could eat a horse!"

Hyperbole

500

The point at which the conflict begins

Inciting Incident

500

A character that really only has one or two personality traits

Flat

500
The emotional meaning of the work; the author's attitude/feeling

Tone

500

The point of view when the narrator is all-knowing and all-seeing

Omniscient

500

What is the other class's name?

Pretty People / Tidepodians

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