Character
Setting and Structure
Point of View
Poetic Devices
Figurative Language
100

the main character that drives the narrative forward

Protagonist

100

The feelings the author creates in the reader through the setting or other details

Mood/Atmosphere

100

consistent use of the pronoun “you,” rarely used, that immerses reader into the experience of the narrator

Second Person

100

the imitation of sounds by words either directly or suggestively

Onomatopoeia

100

A literary device giving human characteristics to inanimate objects or abstract ideas

Personification

200

Type of characterization that requires reader to deduce character traits based on thought process, dialogue, behavior, or response from other characters

Indirect

200

An interruption of the narrative to show an episode that happened before the story opens

Flashback

200

This type of narrator can enter the minds of all the characters

Omniscient

200

The repetition of consonant sounds

Alliteration

200

The word choices made by the writer that reveal the tone

Diction

300

This type of character remains the same throughout the narrative

Static

300

A situation or statement that is significantly different from what is expected

Irony

300

a narrator, who, we perceive, is deceptive, self-deceptive, deluded, or deranged. This may be first or third person.

Unreliable

300

poetry with irregular meter and usually without rhyme, but definitely not the regular rhythm of traditional poetry

Free Verse

300

any object, person, place, or action that  stands for something broader than itself

Symbol

400

weakness or limitation of character, resulting in the fall of the hero

Tragic Flaw

400

Placing two concepts (characters, events, images, etc.) side by side in order to illustrate a theme

Juxtaposition

400

A narrator who is omniscient only over the minds of a few of the characters or the mind of a single character.

Limited

400

Poetic meter consisting of 5 metric feet with syllables that are unstressed/stress, often used in Shakespeare's plays and poetry

Iambic Pentameter

400

A brief, often direct reference to something outside the work of literature

Allusion

500

A character who parallels or contrasts another character in order to highlight the first character's traits or choices

Foil

500

literary device in which a story is enclosed in another story, a tale within a tale

Frame Story

500

The attitude of a speaker or writer toward a subject, a character, or the reader

Tone

500

the use of words that do not strictly rhyme but approximately rhyme

Slant Rhyme

500

a form of concise paradox that combines a pair of opposite terms into a single unusual expression

Oxymoron