Literary Devices
Literary Devices-Take Two
Conflicts
Irony
L.A.P. components
100

Alliteration

The occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. 

Example: A big blue bus drove. 

100

Rhyme

Correspondence of sound between words or the endings of words, especially when these are used at the ends of lines of poetry.

Example: The bus had a lot of dust.

100

Person Vs Person

When on person struggles directly against another individual.

100

Verbal Irony 

When a speaker says one thing but intentionally means the opposite. 

Example: My friend says that there is beautiful weather out while there is a snow storm outside.

100

Topic sentence

Includes a thesis, which is a claim/argument that states of beliefs. 

200

Simile

A figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing. 

Example: This computer is as big as an cow.

200

Onomatopoeia

When a word is created to sound like the actual noise something makes.

Example: BOOM!, POP!, SMACK!

200

Person vs Self

A character that battle there own opposing emotions desires or morale dilemmas. 

200

Situational Irony

When the outcome of the situation is the complete opposite of what is expected. 

Example: The fire hydrant is on fire.

200

Transition

Connects your topic sentence to your contexts. For example one moments in the novel when/where.

300

Metaphor

A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable. 

Example: Life is a roller coaster.

300

Visual cues

Signals like colors, icons, gestures, or placement that guide attention.

Example: The people t  r  a  v  e  l  e  d.

300

Person Vs Society

When a individual clashes with societal norms, expectations or loss.

300

Dramatic Irony

When an characters words or actions are clear to the  audience or reader although unknown to the character.

Example: The main character is saying that they should go into a room but the audience says don't. 

300

Context

Not a summary, background information.

400

Personification

A literary device where human qualities, emotions, or actions are given to inanimate objects, animals, or abstract ideas to make descriptions more vivid, relatable, and emotionally engaging. 

Example: the wind howled.

400

Hyperbole

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.

Example: I'm so tired i could sleep a million years.

400

Person Vs Nature

When a character battles the forces of nature such as a nature disaster extreme weather, wild life or illness. 

400

Dialogue Tag

The dialogue tag helps you introduce the quote.  You cannot start a sentence with a quote on its own.

500

Symbolism

The use of symbols to represent ideas or qualities.

Example: a red rose symbolizing love or a dove representing peace.

500

Rhythm

The regular, patterned recurrence of sounds, movements, or events in time.

Example: Your heartbeat or the beat in music.

500

Person Vs Supernatural

When a human character battles forces beyond normal reality like ghosts, gods, monsters, magic, or fate.

500

Analysis 

Explaining how the evidence you quoted proves your claim.