Week 1 Definitions
Week 2 Definitions
Week 2 Examples
Week 2 Definitions
Week 2 Examples
100

release of one's emotions regarding plot or characters

Catharsis

100

sponsor of the classical Athenian play; serves as the leader of the chorus in the play

Choragos

100

a story set in New York City will have a different style of language compared to a story that takes place in London. They will have different ___?

diction

100

languages describing qualities that are theoretical (good, nice, neat)

abstract diction

100

Another modern-day portrayal of an ___ ___ is Peter Parker, also known as Spiderman.

epic hero

200

narrative poem composed of quatrains

Ballad

200

a movement in art, literature, and ,music that advocates imitating the principles manifested in the art and literature of ancient Greece and Rome; emphasizes reason, clarity, balance and universal themes, directly opposite of Romanticism

Classicism

200

Elizabeth Barrett Browning, ‘The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point’ (the speaker addresses an internal listener)

dramatic monologue

200

repetition of the same middle or final consonant sounds in poetry

consonance

200

"If you can't be a good example, you'll just have to be a horrible warning." - Catherine the Great.

epigram

300

terse statement on a serious subject

Aphorism

300

overused expression; similar to dead metaphors 

chiche

300

"Bitter constraint, and sad occasion dear,/Compels me to disturb your season due:/For Lycidas is dead, dead ere his prime,/Young Lycidas, and hath not left his peer."

elegy

300

turning point; decision made by the protagonist to solve the conflict

crisis (climax)

300

In the middle of a typical argument with his wife, a man realizes he has been the one causing every single argument, and that in order to keep his marriage, he must stop being such an aggressive person.

epiphany

400

a situation that happens over and over again in literature, such as a quest, an initiation, or an attempt to overcome evil

Archetype
400

detailed study of a poem or passage; designed to explain characters, motivation, similarities, and contrasts of sound, situations, ideas, style organization, word selections, settings, etc.

close reading of literature

400

 "I wonder, by my troth, what thou and I / Did, till we loved?"

enjambment

400

entrance of a god to unravel the problems in a play; refers to artificial and illogical solution to problems

deus ex machina

400

the letters of Paul the Apostle

epistle

500

a very brief story told to illustrate a point or serve as an example of something

Anecdote

500

words that describe exact and particular conditions or qualities, such as cold, sweet ice-cream sundae

concrete diction

500

Homer's The Iliad and The Odyssey  

epic

500

language characteristics particular to regions such as New England or South or to separate nations, such as Britain or Australia

dialect

500

"So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see, / So long lives this, and this gives life to thee." (Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18")

euphony

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