Poetry
Novel & Drama
Language & Grammar
Visual Literacy
Figures of Speech
100

This is the pattern of rhyming words at the end of lines in a poem.

Rhyme Scheme

100

The main character in a story.

Protagonist

100

The type of pronoun in this sentence: “She gave herself a break.”

Reflexive Pronoun

100

The main purpose of an advertisement.

Persuasion

100

Extreme exaggeration.

Hyperbole

200

A comparison using “like” or “as.”

Simile

200

The struggle between opposing forces in a story.

Conflict

200

The type of sentence that contains two independent clauses joined by a conjunction.

Compound Sentence

200

A camera shot that focuses closely on a subject.

Close-up

200

The repetition of consonant sounds in nearby words (not at the beginning).

Consonance

300

A six line stanza.

Sestet

300

The turning point of a story.

Climax

300

The language feature in this sentence:
“The buzzing bees banged against the box.”

Alliteration

300

Persuasive words designed to create emotion.

Emotive Language

300

Words that imitate real sounds.

Onomatopoeia

400

A vivid description that appeals to the senses.

Imagery

400

When the audience knows something the characters do not.

Dramatic Irony

400

The voice used in this sentence:
“The homework was completed by the learners.”

Passive Voice

400

The short, memorable phrase in an advertisement.

Slogan

400

A phrase that has both a literal and figurative meaning.

Pun

500

A sudden change in mood, argument, or perspective in a poem is called this.

Volta

500

The event that kickstarts the story.

The Inciting Incident

500

The grammatical rule broken in this sentence:
“Each of the players have a locker.”

Subject-Verb Agreement/Concord

500

Presenting only one side of an issue.

Bias

500

A word mistakenly used in place of another similar-sounding word, often creating humour.

Malapropism