Grammar & Syntax
Famous Authors
Literary Devices
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Famous Novels and Their Authors
100

This part of speech is used to describe or modify a noun or pronoun.

Adjective

100

This English playwright and poet is often called the "Bard of Avon" and wrote Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, and Hamlet.

Shakespeare 

100

This device involves giving human qualities to non-human things, such as "the wind whispered."

Personification

100

A technique in which a character addresses the audience directly

Breaking the fourth wall

100

This author wrote Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and loved creating strange, funny characters.

Roald Dahl

200

This sentence structure includes a subject and a predicate and expresses a complete thought.

Simple sentence 

200

This 19th-century English author wrote Pride and Prejudice and is known for her biting social commentary and witty dialogue.

Jane Austen

200

This term refers to the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words in a series.

Alliteration

200

This dramatic technique involves a sudden shift in mood or tone, often used to create surprise or emphasize a dramatic change.

Plot twist

200

This novel by Mary Shelley tells the story of a scientist who creates a living creature, leading to tragic consequences.

Frankenstein
300

These types of conjunctions connect words, phrases, or clauses of equal importance, such as "and," "but," and "or."

Coordinating conjunctions

300

This American author is famous for writing The Great Gatsby, a novel set in the Roaring Twenties.

F Scott Fitzgerald

300

In a metaphor, a comparison is made without using this word.

Like or as

300

This type of play, often associated with ancient Greek theatre, typically involves serious themes and a tragic ending, where the protagonist meets a downfall due to a flaw or fate.

Tragedy

300

This famous book by J.K. Rowling is about a boy who discovers he is a wizard.

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

400

This type of verb shows action or a state of being and changes according to the subject.

Linking verb

400

This author wrote 'Tales from the Arabian Nights'

Donna Abela

400

This type of irony occurs when the audience knows something that the characters do not.

Dramatic irony

400

What is the technique where a character is aware they are a character in a text?

Metafiction

400

This author wrote The Hunger Games, a story about a girl named Katniss who fights to survive.

Suzanne Collins

500

This punctuation mark is used to indicate possession or a contraction, as in "John's book" or "don't."

Apostrophe

500

This famous English novelist is known for his dystopian works like 1984 and Animal Farm.

George Orwell

500

A type of metaphor that continues over several lines or even the entire work, often found in epic poetry.

Extended metaphor

500

A drama technique often used by Shakespeare where a character talks directly to the audience for an extended time

Monologue

500

In this novel by Harper Lee, a girl named Scout learns about fairness and standing up for what’s right.

To Kill a Mockingbird