A Prose is a Prose
A Poet? Don't know it!
Vocab Schmocab
Literally Literary
Stuff and Things
100

The lesson learned.

What is a theme statement?

100

two consecutive rhyming lines of poetry

What is a couplet?

100

The synonym is unneeded.

What is superfluous?

100

Central character who lacks all the qualities traditionally associated with heroes.

What is an antihero? 

100

The six big ideas of AP Lit.

What are character, setting, structure, narration, figurative language, and literary argumentation?

200

Before the climax, but after the rising action.

What is the complication or second conflict?

200

A paragraph in a poem or the structure of it.

What is a stanza?

200

If you can't choose between two things, you would be this.

Ambivalent 

200

"You are the best teacher in the whole wide world" is an example of this.

What is hyperbole?

200

Ms. Levine's favorite question to ask after you explain something.

What is "what do you mean by that?"?

300

What happens after the story ends.

What is the dénouement? 

300

The point of view of the poem.

Who is the narrator?

300

Consonance and assonance are part of this.

What is alliteration?

300

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere" is an example of this.

What is juxtaposition? 

300

Fantastical events in an otherwise realistic tone is an example of this.

What is magical realism?

400

The guy who created the plot structure pyramid.

Who is Gustav Freytag?

400

 The poet's use of language, word choice, and syntax.

What is diction?

400

The main conflict and obstacle for the protagonist of a story.

What is the antagonist?

400

"Young adult" "Biggie Smalls" "Pretty ugly"

What is an oxymoron?

400

It's the same as the Freytag pyramid.

What is structure?

500

Writing about the relationship of one or more main characters to the physical place.

What is setting?

500

a twentieth century term used to describe poetry that uses intimate material from the poet’s life.

What is confessional poetry?
500

A story where the characters, settings, and events stand for abstract ideas or qualities.

What is an allegory?

500

Wordsworth, Keats, Bronte, and Dickenson are from this period.

What is the romantic period?

500

Ms. Levine is confident you all can do this.

What is passing the test?!?!?!?!