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100

Examples of the types of literary passages.

Fiction, dramas, poetry

100

When determining the themes or central idea of a text, readers often note that a number of interrelated and sometimes complicated ideas work together.

Complex account

100

The way the author's voice sounds within the literary text.

Tone

100

The story is arranged in order of time from the beginning to end.

Chronological

100

This makes a comparison using a inking word such as, like, as, or than

Simile

200

The process of looking closely at the small parts of a text to see how they work together

Analysis


200

The reader is told what a character is like or a speaker or narrator describes what he/she thinks about a character.

Direct characterization.

200

How the characters see or feel about an event.

Point of view.

200

Meanings that are not understood by the definition of the words or phrase.

Figurative meaning.

200

A form of speech intended to convey the opposite of the actual meaning of the words.

Irony

300

When someone mentions a specific portion of a text to support an analysis of the text.

Cite

300

When and where a story, poem, or drama takes place.

Setting

300

Groups of lines in a poem

Stanza

300

This makes a comparison without a linking word.

Metaphor

300

The form of writing that ridicules, scorns people, practices or institutions.

Satire

400

Specific details f that from the text that support the author's purpose, characterizations, or central theme.

Textual evidence.

400

Introduce the characters,  establish the setting.

Exposition

400

A narrative poem, often of folk origin

Ballad

400

This gives human characteristics to nonhuman things.

Personification
400

The use of hints in the narrative that tease the reader about what is to come in the plot

Foreshadowing

500

The deeper message. The meaning the reader takes away from  a literary work.

Theme

500

A struggle between a character and an outside force.

Conflict

500

An overview of the text that captures the main points but does not give every detail and does include opinions.

Objective summary.

500

An exaggeration beyond belief

Hyperbole

500

Language that appeals to the senses and allows the reader to experience what the author is describing.

Imagery