Vocabulary 1
Vocabulary 2
Vocabulary 3
Vocabulary 4
Vocabulary 5
100

a casual and brief reference to a famous historical or literary figure or event

Allusion 

100

the repetition of initial consonant sounds

Alliteration

100

narrative in which literal meaning corresponds directly to symbolic meaning

Allegory 

100

speaking to an absent or dead person

Apostrophe 

100

repetition of similar vowel sounds

Assonance 

200

an adjective or phrase that describes a prominent feature of a person or thing. Example: Alexander the Great

Epithet 

200

the use of words to express something different than their literal meaning, or different than what's expected

Irony

200

a form of understatement in which a statement is affirmed by negating its opposite. Example: This is no small problem.

Litotes 

200

a comparison without using like or as

Metaphor 

200

a figure of speech in which part of something is used to stand for the thing itself. Example: "Washington" stands for the entire United States government.

Metonym 

300

the substitution of a mild or less negative word or phrase for a harsh or blunt one

Euphemism 

300

the use of words which in their pronunciation suggest their meaning

Onomatopoeia 

300

a figure of speech which, for emphasis, contradictory terms are brought sharply together

Oxymoron 

300

a self-contradictory statement that finds deeper meaning

Paradox 

300

use of two or more words, phrases, or sentences with the same grammatical structure

Parallelism 

400

a figure of speech in which deliberate exaggeration is used for emphasis

Hyperbole 

400

giving an inanimate object human qualities

Personification 

400

a figure of speech using like or as

Simile 

400

a type of irony that occurs when speaking that, by context, implies its opposite

Verbal Irony 

400

a type of irony that occurs when what is expected to happen is different than the outcome

Situational Irony 

500

place two items side by side to create an effect, reveal an attitude, or accomplish a purpose

Juxtaposition 

500

work that exposes to ridicule the shortcomings of individuals, institutions,or society

Satire 

500

A play on words that exploits the similar in sound between two words with distinctly different meanings. Example: Pythons go to great lengths to kill their prey.

Pun

500

a techinque used by writers to hint at what will happen next

Foreshadowing 

500

author reveals what other people say about the character; readers make inferences about what the character is like as opposed to being told directly

Indirect Characterization