Vocabulary From Text
Types of Irony
Types of Rhetorical Devices
Defining a character
Point of View
100
widespread respect and admiration felt for someone or something on the basis of a perception of their achievements or quality.
What is prestige?
100
Irony in which a person says or writes one thing and means another, or uses words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of the literal meaning
What is verbal irony?
100
Convincing an audience
What is ethos?
100
Minor character embodies 1 or 2 qualities and is easily summarized, can be stock/stereotype and reader can easily know about the character
What is a flat character?
100
using I or we
what is first person point of you?
200
severe or bare in appearance or outline.
What is stark?
200
involving a situation in which actions have an effect that is opposite from what was intended, so that the outcome is contrary to what was expected.
What is Situation irony?
200
Persuade a reader by the use of emotions
What is pathos?
200
major characters who’re complex multidimensional, unpredictable ,hard to understand ,display internal conflicts in real people. Should have conflict, desire, diff emotions
What is a round character?
200
using "you"
What is second person point of view?
300
a pause or break in continuity in a sequence or activity.
What is hiatus?
300
novels or drama in which a situation is understood by the audience but not grasped by the characters.
What is Dramatic irony
300
Use of reasoning
What is logos?
300
A fictional character that relies heavily on cultural types or stereotypes for its personality,manner of speech, and other characteristics. Stock characters are instantly recognizable to members of a given culture
What is a stock character?
300
using "he" or "she."
What is third person point of view?
400
showing contempt; scornful.
What is contemptuous?
400
"The cake is as soft as concrete"
What is an example of verbal irony?
400
words and phrases that have strong emotional implications. Evoke positive or negative reactions
What is loaded language?
400
Characters who don’t undergo substantial emotional change or growth, remaining essentially the same in the end as he or she was in the beginning
What is a static character?
400
First Person
What type of point of view is used? I like to run
500
worthy of high praising
What is laudable?
500
In a scary movie, the character walks into a house and the audience knows the killer is in the house.
What is an example of dramatic irony?
500
repeating grammatical structures
What is Parallelism?
500
one who undergoes an important change in the course of the story. The changes aren’t changes in circumstance, but changes in some sense within the character-changes in some sense within the character- changes in insight or understanding, changes in beliefs,values,etc.
What is a dynamic character?
500
Third Person
What type point of view is used? He likes to run