Figurative Language
Poetic terms
More poetic terms
Narrative techniques
More narrative techniques
100

Lively description which creates vivid pictures in the mind, or appeals to other sensory experience.

Imagery

100

The recurrence of initial consonant sounds of different words within the same sentence.

Alliteration

100

Usually a repeated grouping of three or more lines with the same meter and rhyme scheme.

Stanza

100

The writer's attitude or moral outlook towards the subject and/or readers.

Tone

100

An author's insight on the human condition. The main idea, lesson, message, or universal meaning of a literary work.

Theme

200

Assigns the physical or emotional attributes of a human to a non-living thing.

Personification

200

A type of poetry which avoids the patterns of regular rhyme or meter.

Free verse

200

What is this 2-syllable rhythmic pattern:

u     /

Iambic

200

A literary technique which imitates and ridicules another author, work, or genre.

Parody

200

The use of words or objects to represent other things. 

Symbolism

300

An indirect reference to a person, idea, object, literary work, event, concept, element of pop culture, or some other noun that the reader is likely already familiar with.

Allusion

300

Unrhymed poetry written with regular rhythm and meter.

Blank verse

300

Rhyme that occurs within a line.

Internal rhyme

300

A way of writing about a flaw or failure in society by exaggerating it to absurdity. Often offered as a societal corrective.

Satire

300

When the audience perceives something that a character in literature does not know.

Dramatic irony

400

A comparison between two things, but without the use of “like” or “as.” Commonly uses “to be” between each word in the comparison.

Metaphor

400

The close repetition of similar vowel sounds in proximate words, usually in stressed syllables.

Assonance

400

Identify the meter:

(/  u) (/  u) (/  u) (/  u)

Tetrameter

400

A story which makes sense on a literal level, but also conveys an abstract meaning. The deeper meaning is usually spiritual, moral, or political.

Allegory

400

A story that traces the moral and psychological growth of its protagonist from childhood to adulthood, often exploring themes of identity, self-discovery, and societal influences.

Bildungsroman

500

Suggests a comparison of two things, instead of explicitly stating that one thing is being compared to another.

(Ex. The room erupted in laughter.)

Implied metaphor

500

A three-line stanza rhymed as follows: aba bcb cdc ...

(Hint: Dante's Divine Comedy)

Terza Rima

500

Normally a 14-line poem in rhymed iambic pentameter.

Sonnet

500

A figure of speech where a concept or object is referred to by a related term, rather than its literal name, to create a vivid and evocative image or convey a deeper meaning.

(Ex. The crown has decreed...)

Metonymy

500

A figure of speech where a part of something is used to represent the whole, or the whole to represent a part.

(Ex. All hands on deck!)

Synecdoche