Plot
Literary Devices
POV
Characterization
Figurative Language
100

Exposition

Start of the story introduces main plot and characters

100

Verbal Irony

Statement in which opposite is said then what happens

100

1st Person

uses I and me, told from a character

100

Round

Know a lot on the character

100

Simile

A figure of speech using like or as

200

Rising action

Problem is introduced and conflict may start

200

Situational Irony

When a situation turns out differently than expected

200

Unreliable Narrator

Narrator that cannot be trusted in the story

200

Flat 

Know some if not nothing on the character

200

Metaphor 

A figure of speech saying something is something else

300

Climax

The most important part of the story or poem

300

Dramatic Irony

Something the reader knows that the character does not

300

Reliable Narrator

Narrator the can always be trusted in the story

300

Static

Stays the same in the Story

300

Alliteration

A close letter or sound in close together words

400

Falling action

Conflict starts to stop/slow down

400

Dialect

Different form of language for different cultures

400

Omnicent

Knows everything in the story

400

Dynamic 

Under goes a change (large) in a story

400

Onomatopoeia 

Sounds expressed as words

500

Resolution

Conflict is resolved and story ends

500

Foreshadowing

Hinting to important area in a plot

500

Limited

can be told through an observer watching the plot unfold

500

Character Foil

Comparing Characters to eachother

500

Hyperbole 

Exaggerated statement

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