Which stylistic feature is used:
"soft and silent"
What is alliteration?
The underlying message of a work of art or literature.
What is theme?
This type of character is used to contrast against another character.
What is a foil character?
This rhetorical device appeals to logic.
What is logos?
Second-person narrative perspective uses these pronouns.
What is "you"?
Which stylistic feature is used:
"awfully good"
What is an oxymoron?
The difference between a metaphor and a simile.
What is "like" or "as"?
Identify the type of characterization:
"John was very sad."
What is direct characterization?
This rhetoric device appeals to credibility.
In a classic story plot, this event takes place immediately after the exposition.
What is an inciting incident?
Which stylistic feature is used:
The reader knows the tragedy of Boxer's death, but the farm animals do not.
What is dramatic irony?
Name the three types of irony.
What are situational irony, dramatic irony, and verbal irony?
The climax in Lord of the Flies.
What is Simon's death?
This rhetorical device appeals to emotion.
What is pathos?
A stereotypical character.
What is a stock character?
Which stylistic feature is used:
"It's like in a book...Treasure Island, Swallows and Amazons...Coral Island..." -Lord of the Flies
What is an allusion?
The conch in Lord of the Flies is a _____ for order and civilization, and can also be considered a _____ for power.
What is a symbol?
Identify all parts of a story plot.
What are exposition, inciting incident, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution?
The timing of an argument or action.
What is karios?
Identify the rhetorical device used:
"Buy this marker! Professors at top universities use this to teach students."
What is ethos?
Which stylistic feature is used:
"Try to light the fire."
What is assonance?
Name the five types of imagery and what sense they appeal to.
What is visual, auditory, olfactory, gustatory, and tactile imagery?
Identify and distinguish the third-person narrative perspectives.
What is third-person omniscient, objective, and limited?
Another name for a rhetorical question.
What is erotesis?
The author's attitude towards a topic.
What is tone?