Figurative Language (terms)
Elements of Fiction
Elements of Argumentation
Figurative Fiction (example ID from SUS)
Name that Story
(quote ID)
Revising Substantially
100

Exaggeration that emphasizes a certain point or creates a strong impression

Hyperbole

100

The element of fiction that deals with events.

Plot

100

Alternative interpretations of a text can serve as ________ in an essay.

counterarguments

100

“Her and Michael sleep on the sofa, both of them fish-thin, slender as two gray sardines, packed just as tight.”

simile

100

“I don’t like our room a bit. I wanted one downstairs that opened on the piazza and had roses all over the window, and such pretty old-fashioned chintz hangings!”

"The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (Charlotte Perkins Stetson also OK)

100

The two "levels" of revision a writer can undertake.

Global and local

200

Establishes a relationship between two ideas or things by equating/replacing one with the other

Metaphor

200

In contrast to the real world, this is the alternative world in which a piece of fiction takes place.

storyworld

200

Name the three rhetorical appeals.

ethos, pathos, logos

200

"My heart is a squirrel caught in a snare."

metaphor

200

“So I went upstairs. My legs felt like they didn’t have any strength in them. They felt like they did after I’d done some running. In my wife’s room, I looked around. I found some ballpoints in a little basket on her table. And then I tried to think where to look for the kind of paper he was talking about.”

"Cathedral" by Raymond Carver

200

This revision strategy makes a list of paragraph main ideas in order to get a bird's-eye view of essay organization.

Reverse Outlining

300

Attributes personal or human characteristics to a nonhuman entity, object, or idea

Personification

300

A narrator that has unlimited knowledge of the characters, events, etc. in the storyworld is an _________ narrator.

omniscient

300

Topic sentences that introduce the new information of the topic by first restating what the reader already knows use this strategy.

Old/New Contract

300

"I gulp against the feeling I want to throw up all the food that I ever ate.”

Hyperbole

300

Have you ever eaten dog food? I have.

"My Lucy Friend who Smells like Corn" by Sandra Cisneros

300

This revision strategy, which focuses on eliminating unnecessary prepositions and creating active verbs, is like a "first responder" for local revisions.

The Paramedic Method

400

When a term for a part is used to refer to the whole.

synecdoche 

400

In fiction, language is ________, meaning that it takes primary importance.

foregrounded

400

This fourth, lesser known rhetorical appeal is all about the timeliness of the argument. Why make this argument now?

Kairos

400

“I kneel and lean back on my haunches. The day pulses like a flush vein. Wipe my eyes, smear dirt across my face, and make myself blind.”

Personification

400

"At the Day’s dawning, the children of the city come forth, most wearing wings made for them by parents and kind old aunties. (Not all aunties are actually aunties, but in ----, anyone can earn auntie-hood. This is a city where numberless aspirations can be fulfilled.) Some wings are organza stitched onto school backpacks; some are quilted cotton stuffed with dried flowers and clipped to jacket shoulders."

"The Ones Who Stay and Fight" by N.K. Jemisin

400

This revision (and brainstorming) strategy requires visually mapping an argument or concept, connecting like ideas with like ideas.

Concept mapping

500

Connects/combines elements that appear to be contradictory, but conceals a point or paradox

oxymoron

500

________ characterization is when the narrator describes a character’s physical, mental, or behavioral characteristics.

direct characterization

500

The XYZ thesis is shorthand for… (i.e. the 3 words)

Observation, Intervention, Implication

500

Name two: 

“He’s singing to Casper, and there are words in it but I can’t understand them, like language flipped inside out. A skinned animal: an inverted pelt. I can’t help it."

simile, metaphor

500

"As she dressed for supper on that Saturday evening, her own flesh felt like fever. Her hands trembled among the hooks and eyes, and her eyes had a feverish look, and her hair swirled crisp and crackling under the comb. While she was still dressing the friends called for her and sat while she donned her sheerest underthings and stockings and a new voile dress."

"Dry September" by William Faulkner

500

A writing process that is no longer linear, but is focused on the circular relationship between prewriting, drafting, and revision is this kind of writing process.

Recursive