Exposition
Start of the story introduces main plot and characters
Verbal Irony
Statement in which opposite is said then what happens
1st Person
uses I and me, told from a character
Round
Know a lot on the character
Simile
A figure of speech using like or as
Rising action
Problem is introduced and conflict may start
Situational Irony
When a situation turns out differently than expected
Unreliable Narrator
Narrator that cannot be trusted in the story
Flat
Know some if not nothing on the character
Metaphor
A figure of speech saying something is something else
Climax
The most important part of the story or poem
Dramatic Irony
Something the reader knows that the character does not
Reliable Narrator
Narrator the can always be trusted in the story
Static
Stays the same in the Story
Alliteration
A close letter or sound in close together words
Falling action
Conflict starts to stop/slow down
Dialect
Different form of language for different cultures
Omnicent
Knows everything in the story
Dynamic
Under goes a change (large) in a story
Onomatopoeia
Sounds expressed as words
Resolution
Conflict is resolved and story ends
Foreshadowing
Hinting to important area in a plot
Limited
can be told through an observer watching the plot unfold
Character Foil
Comparing Characters to eachother
Hyperbole
Exaggerated statement