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AP Language literary terms Flashcards

Here are 100+ literary terms every AP 11 student should know!

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6576492111EthosAppeals to an audience's sense of morality/trust; Achieved by projecting an image of credibility which supports the speaker's position0
6576492112PathosAppeals to an audience's sense of emotion; Achieved by evoking a passionate response which supports the speaker's position1
6576492113LogosAppeals to an audience's sense of intellect; Achieved by providing valid and relevant facts which support the speaker's position2
6576492114ClassicismArt or literature characterized by a realistic view of people and the world; sticks to traditional themes and structures3
6576492115AntecedentThe word, phrase, or clause referred to by a pronoun.4
6576492116Active VoiceThe subject of the sentence performs the action5
6576492117DenotationThe literal, explicit meaning of a word, without its connotations6
6576492118ConnotationImplied meaning rather than literal meaning7
6576492119DictionWord choice, particularly as an element of style8
6576492120Abstract LanguageLanguage describing ideas and qualities rather than observable or specific things, people or places.9
6576492121AnalogyA comparison to a directly parallel case10
6576492122AphorismA terse statement which expresses a general truth or moral principle11
6576492123AllusionAn indirect reference to something with which the reader is supposed to be familiar12
6576492124AmbiguityAn event or situation that may be interpreted in more than one way13
6576492125Concrete LanguageLanguage that describes specific, observable things, peoples or places, rather than ideas or qualities14
6576492126ColloquialOrdinary or familiar type of conversation; vernacular15
6576492127AllegoryA story, fictional or non fictional, in which characters, things, and events represent qualities or concepts16
6576492128ApostropheA figure of speech that directly addresses an absent or imaginary person or personified abstraction, such as liberty or love. The effect may add familiarity or emotional intensity.17
6576492129AnecdoteA brief recounting of a relevant episode18
6576492130Adage:A folk saying with a lesson19
6576492131AttitudeRevealed through diction, figurative language, and organization20
6576492132AnnotationExplanatory notes added to a text to explain, clarify, or prompt further thought.21
6576492133AppositiveA word or group or words placed beside a noun or noun substitute to supplement its meaning22
6576492134DidacticA term used to describe fiction, nonfiction or poetry that teaches a specific lesson or moral or provides a model of correct behavior or thinking23
6576492135HyperboleExaggeration24
6576492136EpigramA short poem with a clever twist at the end, or a concise and witty statement25
6576492137Figurative LanguageThe opposite of "literal language"; writing that is not meant to be taken literally26
6576492138EpigraphA quotation or aphorism at the beginning of a literary work suggestive of theme.27
6576492139HomilyThis term literally means "sermon," but more informally, it can include any serious talk, speech, or lecture involving moral or spiritual advice.28
6576492140GenreThe major category into which a literary work fits.29
6576492141ImageryWord or words that create a picture in the reader's mind.30
6576492142Verbal IronyWhen you say something and mean the opposite/something different31
6576492143JargonThe diction used by a group which practices a similar profession or activity32
6576492144VernacularLanguage or dialect of a particular country, language or dialect of a regional clan or group, plain everyday speech.33
6576492145SimileUsing words such as "like" or "as" to make a direct comparison between two very different things.34
6576492146IronyWhen the opposite of what you expect to happen does35
6576492147IdiomA common, often used expression that doesn't make sense if you take it literally.36
6576492148ExplicationThe act of interpreting or discovering the meaning of a text.37
6576492149EllipsisThe deliberate omission of a word or phrase from prose done for effect by the author.38
6576492150EuphemismA more agreeable or less offensive substitute for generally unpleasant words or concepts.39
6576492151MetaphorMaking an implied comparison, not using "like," "as," or other such words.40
6576492152GothicWriting characterized by gloom, mystery, fear and/or death.41
6576492153InvectiveAn emotional violent, verbal denunciation or attack using strong, abusive language.42
6576492154Situational IronyFound in the plot of a book, story, or movie43
6576492155Suspension of disbeliefThe demand made that the reader accept the incidents recounted in the literary work44
6576492156ObjectivityAn author's stance that distances himself from personal involvement.45
6576492157OxymoronWhen apparently contradictory terms are grouped together and suggest a paradox.46
6576492158ParadoxA seemingly contradictory statement which is actually true.47
6576492159RhetoricThe art of effective communication.48
6576492160AntithesisTwo opposite or contrasting words, phrases, or clauses, or even ideas, with parallel structure.49
6576492161ParodyAn exaggerated imitation of a serious work for humorous purposes.50
6576492162Passive VoiceThe subject of the sentence receives the action.51
6576492163PedanticObserving strict adherence to formal rules or literal meaning at the expense of a wider view.52
6576492164SarcasmA generally bitter comment that is ironically worded53
6576492165PersonaThe fictional mask or narrator that tells a story.54
6576492166JuxtapositionPlacing things side by side for the purposes of comparison.55
6576492167RomanticismArt or literature characterized by an idealistic, perhaps unrealistic view of people and the world, and an emphasis on nature.56
6576492168ParallelismSentence construction which places equal grammatical construction near each other, or repeats identical grammatical patterns.57
6576492169MoodThe atmosphere created by the literature and accomplished through word choice.58
6576492170AnaphoraRepetition or a word, phrase, or clause at the beginning of two or more sentences in a row59
6576492171SemanticsThe study of actual meaning in languages--especially the meanings of individual words and word combinations in phrases and sentences60
6576492172Rhetorical QuestionA question not asked for information but for effect.61
6576492173SatireA work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of life to a humorous effect.62
6576492174ClauseA grammatical unit that contains both a subject and a verb.63
6576492175Compound SentenceContains at least two independent clauses but no dependent clauses.64
6576492176Complex SentenceContains only one independent clause and at least one dependent clause.65
6576492177Balanced SentenceOne in which two parallel elements are set off against each other like equal weights on a scale.66
6576492178Interrogative SentenceSentences incorporating interrogative pronouns.67
6576492179ThemeThe central idea or message of a work.68
6576492180SentenceA group of words (including subject and verb) that expresses a complete thought.69
6576492181Simple SentenceContains one independent clause.70
6576492182Loose SentenceA complex sentence in which the main clause comes first and the subordinate clause follows.71
6576492183Compound - Complex SentenceContains two or more independent clauses and at least one dependent clause.72
6576492184Declarative SentenceStates an idea73
6576492185Periodic SentenceWhen the main idea is not completed until the end of the sentence.74
6576492186Imperative SentenceIssues a command75
6576492187LitotesA particular form of understatement, generated by denying the opposite of the statement which otherwise would be used.76
6576492188TransitionSmooth movement from one paragraph (or idea) to another.77
6576492189UnderstatementThe ironic minimizing of fact, presents something as less significant than it is.78
6576492190SyntaxGrammatical arrangement of words.79
6576492191ThesisThe sentence or groups of sentences that directly expresses the author's opinion, purpose, meaning, or proposition.80
6576492192StyleThe choices in diction, tone, and syntax that a writer makes81
6576492193SymbolAnything that represents or stands for something else.82
6576492194ClaimA statement or assertion that is open to challenge and that requires support83
6576492195Parenthetical phrase/ideaInterrupts the flow of a sentence with some commentary or added detail.84
6576492196Rhetorical modesDescribe the variety, conventions, and purposes of the major kinds of writing. Four of the most common are exposition, argumentation, description, and narration.85
6576492197KairosThe opportune time and/or place, the right or appropriate time to say or do the right or appropriate thing.86
6576492198ArgumentationThe interdisciplinary study of how conclusions can be reached through logical reasoning; that is, claims based, soundly or not, on premises. It includes the arts and sciences of civil debate, dialogue, conversation, and persuasion.87
6576492199CaricatureThe exaggeration of specific features of appearance or personality88
6576492200ConceitA comparison of two unlikely things that is drawn out within a piece of literature, in particular an extended metaphor within a piece of literature.89
6576492201DescriptionThe picturing in words of something or someone through detailed observation of color, motion, sound, taste, smell, and touch; one of the four modes of discourse.90
6576492202MetonymyA figure of speech in which a person, place, or thing, is referred to by something closely associated with it.91
6576492203NarrationThe act of telling a story, whether in prose or in verse, and the means by which that telling is accomplished.92
6576492204ProseThe ordinary form of spoken and written language whose unit is the sentence, rather than the line as it is in poetry. The term applies to all expressions in language that do not have a regular rhythmic pattern.93
6576492205InferenceInterpreting or drawing a conclusion.94
6576492206Generic conventionsTraditions for each genre. These help to define each genre; they differentiate an essay and journalistic writing or an autobiography and political writing; the unique feature of a writer's work from those dictated by convention.95
6576492207Extended metaphorA sustained comparison, often referred to as a conceit, developed throughout a piece of writing.96
6576492208ExpositionThe immediate revelation to the audience of the setting and other background information necessary for understanding the plot; also, explanation; one of the four modes of discourse.97
6576492209Independent clauseA clause that can stand by itself, also known as a simple sentence; contains a subject and a predicate; it makes sense by itself.98
6576492210Subordinate clauseAlso called a dependent clause—will begin with a subordinate conjunction or a relative pronoun and will contain both a subject and a verb. This combination of words will not form a complete sentence. It will instead make a reader want additional information to finish the thought.99
6576492211AsyndetonA figure of speech in which one or several conjunctions are omitted from a series of related clauses.100
6576492212AlliterationSequential repetition of similar sounds101
6576492213AssonanceRepetition of identical or similar vowel sounds102
6576492214Begging the questionPloy where the arguer sidesteps questions or conflicts, evading or ignoring the question103
6576492215CanonThat which has been accepted as authentic104
6576492216ConsonanceRepetition of two or more consonants105
6576492217ConventionAccepted manner, model, or tradition106
6576492218Deductive reasoningArgument in which specific statements/conclusions are drawn from general principles: movement from general to specific107
6576492219DialectLanguage and speech idiosyncrasies of a specific area, region, or group of people108
6576492220ElegyPoetic lamentation upon a death of a particular person109
6576492221EpistropheRepetition of a phrase at the end of a sentence110
6576492222EulogySpeech in prose in praise of a deceased person111
6576492223Inductive reasoningArgument in which general conclusions are drawn from specific facts112
6576492224OnomatopoeiaWords that sound like what it desscribes113
6576492225PersonificationGiving human qualities to abstract idea/nonhuman object114
6576492226Point of viewRelation of narrator/author to the subject115
6576492227RealismDescribing nature/life without idealization116
6576492228Rebuttal/refutationCountering of anticipated arguments117
6576492229SynecdocheWhen part is used to signify a whole118
6576492230AnachronismAn event, object, custom, person, or thing that is out of order in time119
6576492231AuthoritySupport for an argument that is based on recognized experts in the field120
6576492232BurlesqueBroad parody; whereas parody will imitate and exaggerate a specific work, this will take an entire style or form (such as myth) and exaggerate it into ridiculousness121
6576492233CacophonyHarsh, awkward, or dissonant sounds used deliberately in poetry or prose122
6576492234CoherenceQuality of a piece of writing in which all the parts contribute to the development of the central idea, theme, or organizing principle123
6576492235ConundrumA riddle whose answer is or involves a pun; it may also be a paradox or difficult problem124
6576492236DiscourseSpoken or written language, including literary works; the four traditionally classified modes are description, exposition, narration, and persuasion125
6576492237DissonanceHarsh or grating sounds that do not go together126
6576492238EuphonyA succession of harmonious sounds used in poetry or prose127
6576492239ExemplumA brief tale used in medieval times to illustrate a sermon or teach a lesson128
6576492240Figures of speechExpressions, such as similes, metaphors, and personification, that make imaginative, rather than literal, comparisons or associations129
6576492241FolkloreTraditional stories, songs, dances, and customs that are preserved among a people; usually precedes literature, being passed down orally from generation to generation until recorded by scholars130
6576492242Ad hominem argument/ad hominem fallacyFrom the Latin meaning "to or against the man," this appeals to emotion rather than reason, to feeling rather than intellect; when a person's character or motive is attacked rather than the argument itself131
6576492243HubrisThe excessive pride or ambition that leads a tragic hero to disregard warnings of impending doom, eventually causing his or her downfall132
6576492244MotifMain theme or subject of a work that is elaborated on in the development of the piece; a repeated pattern or idea133
6576492245ParableA short tale that teaches a moral; similar to but shorter than an allegory134
6576492246PersuasionA form of argumentation, one of the four modes of discourse; language intended to convince through appeals to reason or emotion135
6576492247RegionalismAn element in literature that conveys a realistic portrayal of a specific geographic locale, using the locale and its influences as a major part of the plot136
6576492248StereotypeA character who represents a trait that is usually attributed to a particular social or racial group and who lacks individuality137
6576492249SubjectivityA personal presentation of events and characters, influenced by the author's feelings and opinions138
6576492250ZeugmaUsing a single verb to refer to two different objects in an ungrammatical but striking way, or artfully using an adjective to refer to two separate nouns, even though the adjective would logically only be appropriate for one of the two.139
6576492251ad populum fallacy(Latin for "to the crowd") a fallacy of logic in which the widespread occurrence of something is assumed to make it true or right140
6576492252appeal to authoritycitation of information from people recognized for their special knowledge of a subject for the purpose of strengthening a speaker or writer's arguments.141
6576492253cause and effectexamination of the causes and/or effects of a situation or phenomenon142
6576492254chronological orderingarrangement in the order in which things occur; may move from past to present or in reverse chronological order, from present to past143
6576492255classification as a means of orderingarrangement of objects according to class144
6576492256damning with faint praiseintentional use of a positive statement that has a negative implication145
6576492257digressiona temporary departure from the main subject in speaking or writing146
6576492258false dilemma/false dichotomya type of informal fallacy in which something is falsely claimed to be an either/or situation, when in fact there is at least one additional option147
6576492259inverted syntax or inversionan interchange of position of adjacent objects in a sequence, especially a change in normal word order, such as the placement of a verb before its subject148
6576492260non sequitura statement that does not follow logically from what preceded it149
6576492261order of importancea method of organizing a paper according to the relative significance of the subtopics150
6576492262post hoc fallacyoccurs when the writer assume that an incident that precedes another is the cause of the second incident.151
6576492263spatial orderingorganization of information using spatial cues such as top to bottom, left to right, etc.152
6576492264syllogisma form of reasoning in which two statements or premises are made and a logical conclusion is drawn from them; a form of deductive reasoning.153
6576492265hasty generalizationoccurs when the proponent uses too small of a sample size to support a sweeping generalization.154
6576492266missing the pointthe premise of the argument supports a specific conclusion but not the one the author draws.155
6576492267spotlight fallacyoccurs when the author assumes that the cases that receive the most publicity are the most common cases156
6576492268straw man fallacythe author puts forth one of his opponent's weaker, less central arguments forward and destroys it, while acting like this argument is the crux of the issue157
6576492269equivocationUsing an ambiguous term in more than one sense, thus making an argument misleading.158
6576492270atmostpherethe emotional mood created by the entirety of a literary work, established partly by the setting and partly by the author's choice of objects that are described.159
6576492271chiasmusinverted parallelism; two clauses are related to each other through a reversal of terms (i.e. "ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country."_160
6576492272predicate adjectivean adjective or group of adjectives that follows a linking verb; it is in the predicate of the sentence and modifies or describes the subject161
6576492273predicate nominativea noun or group of nouns that renames the subject that follows a linking verb; it is in the predicate of the sentence162
6576492274repetitionthe duplication, either exact or approximate, of any element of language such as sound, word, phrase, clause, sentence, or grammatical pattern163
6576492275rhetorical appealthe persuasive device by which a writer tries to sway the audience's attention and response to any given work164
6576492276subject complimentthe word with any accompanying phrases or clause that follows a linking verb and completes the sentence165
6576492277meiosisGreek term for understatement or belittling; referring to something as less important than it really deserves166
6576492278witintellectually amusing language that surprises and delights usually in terse language167
6576492279idylla short, descriptive narrative, usually a poem, about an idealized country life (also called a pastoral)168
6576492280interior monologuewriting that records the conversation that occurs inside a character's head169
6576492281naturalismportrays humans as having no free will, being driven by the natural forces of heredity, environment, and animalistic urges over which they have no control170
6576492282unityquality of a piece of writing (also coherence)171
6576492283voicethe way a written work conveys the author's attitude172
6576492284qualifyto describe by specifying the characteristics or qualities of; characterize173
6576492285parallel structureusing the same pattern of words to show that two or more ideas have the same level of importance174
6576492286prepositional phrasea phrase that consists of a preposition and its object and has adjectival or adverbial value175
6576492287pronounA word that can function by itself as a noun phrase and that refers either to the participants in the discourse or to someone or something mentioned elsewhere in the discourse176
6576492288Ad Hocused for the particular end or case at hand without consideration of wider application177
6576492289participial phraseincludes the participle and the object of the participle or any words modified by or related to the participle.178
6576492290circular reasoning or circular logica use of reason in which the premises depends on or is equivalent to the conclusion, a method of false logic by which "this is used to prove that, and that is used to prove this"179
6576492291gerunda form that is derived from a verb but that functions as a noun, in English ending in -ing,180
6576492292participlea word formed from a verb (e.g., going, gone, being, been ) and used as an adjective (e.g., working woman, burned toast ) or a noun (e.g., good breeding ).181
6576492293prepositionAny member of a class of words found in many languages that are used before nouns, pronouns, or other substantives to form phrases functioning as modifiers of verbs, nouns, or adjectives, and that typically express a spatial, temporal, or other relationship, as in, on, by, to, since.182
6576492294adjectiveA word or phrase naming an attribute, added to or grammatically related to a noun to modify or describe it.183
6576492295nouna word that can be common or proper and is used to identify any of a class of people, places, ideas or things184
6576492296verba word that characteristically is the grammatical center of a predicate and expresses an act, occurrence, or mode of being, that in various languages is inflected for agreement with the subject, for tense, for voice, for mood, or for aspect, and that typically has rather full descriptive meaning and characterizing quality but is sometimes nearly devoid of these especially when used as an auxiliary or linking185
6576492297adverbA word or phrase that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or adverb or a word group, expressing a relation of place, time, circumstance, manner, cause, degree, etc.186
6576492298articleDefines a noun as specific or unspecific187
6576492299conjunctionA word used to connect clauses or sentences or to coordinate words in the same clause188
6576492300interjectionShows excitement or emotion; usually come at the start of a sentence followed by an exclamation point (or by a comma if the feeling's not as strong)189
6576530505Dramatic IronyWhen the audience of a drama, play, movie etc. knows something that the character doesn't know and would be surprised to find out.190

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