Fig. Lang.
Drama
Fiction 1
Fiction 2
General
But you didn't teach that?!?
100

A comparison using "like" or "as"

Simile

100

These tell the actors (and the readers) how a scene should be performed; they are usually in parentheses, brackets or italicized

Stage directions 

100

When and where a story takes place

Setting

100

Something that stands for a concept or idea of something else

Symbol

100

A question asked to make a point rather than to get an answer - "What happens to a dream deferred?"

Rhetorical question

100

A sudden understanding of something not previously understood ("Ah ha" moment)

Epiphany

200

Giving non-human things human qualities

Personification

200

The author's attitude toward his subject; could be critical, sympathetic, angry, etc. 

Tone

200

The series of events that make up a story (or movie/novel/play)

Plot

200

A struggle outside the body; human vs. human, human vs. nature, human vs. society, etc. 

External conflict

200

A conclusion or opinion that is formed because of known facts or evidence; an educated guess

Inference

200

Two words of opposite meaning right next to each other

Oxymoron

300

A type of figurative language that exaggerates for emphasis 

Hyperbole

300

A feeling of curiosity or tension; it makes you want to keep turning the pages

Suspense

300

The moral of the story; the life lesson that the reader learns

Theme

300

Type of narration when the narrator uses words like, "I," "we," "me," "my," etc. 

First person POV

300

The feelings and emotions relating to a word; can be negative, neutral or positive

Connotation

300

A joke or play on words exploiting the different possible meanings of a word - "Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man." (Mercutio right before he dies in Romeo & Juliet)

Pun

400

A direct comparison; calling one thing another

Metaphor

400

The atmosphere of a story (movie/book/play)

Mood

400

A character OR force working against the main character

Antagonist

400

A character who stays the same throughout a story

Static character

400

Divisions in poetry; a 'poem paragraph'

Stanza

400

In a play, when a character speaks directly to the audience and the other actors on stage pretend not to hear

Aside

500

Language that appeals to the reader's senses

Imagery

500

A type of irony when the audience or reader knows something that a character does not

Dramatic Irony

500

When the author gives hints and clues about events that have not yet occurred

Foreshadowing

500

Type of narration when the reader knows the thoughts and feelings of ALL major characters

Third person omniscient POV

500

The dictionary definition of a word

Denotation

500

A statement that seems to contradict itself, but that also contains some truth - "It was the best of times; it was the worst of times."  (Opening line of novel A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens)

Paradox

600

The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of consecutive words (think tongue twister!) 

Alliteration

600

In a play, an extended speech by a character, while other characters are also on stage

Monologue

600

The main character who the reader wants to see succeed

Protagonist

600

A character who goes through a dramatic change

Dynamic character

600

A reference to someone or something famous - the Mona Lisa, the Bible, MLK, George Washington, etc. 

Allusion

600

The substitution of a mild or indirect expression for one thought to be offensive, harsh, or blunt - "To let someone go" instead of "To fire someone"

Euphemism

700

A common expression not to be taken literally; the understanding is NOT the literal meaning of the words themselves; "It's raining cats and dogs."

Idiom

700

In a play, a speech by a character who is alone (or thinks he is) on stage

Soliloquy

700

A character TYPE that represents universal patterns or traits of human nature (the time and place don't matter)  - hero/heroine, rebel, scapegoat, villain, caretaker, innocent, etc. 

Archetype 

700

A type of narration where the reader knows only the thoughts and feelings of ONE character

Third person limited POV

700

A type of irony when a situation turns out unexpected

Situational irony

700

A balanced statement of contrasting ideas- "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country." JFK

Antithesis