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AP Lit. terms Flashcards

AP Lit summer assignment terms for Rosenast

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75090066AbstractAn abstract style (in writing) is typically complex, discusses intangible qualities like good and evil, and seldom uses examples to support its points.0
75090067AcademicAs an adjective describing style, this word means dry and theoretical writing. When a piece of writing seems to be sucking all the life out of its subject with analysis, the writing is in this style.1
75090068AccentIn poetry, accent refers to the stressed portion of a word. In "To be, or not to be," accents fall on the first "be" and "not." It sounds silly any other way. But accent in poetry is also often a matter of opinion. Consider the rest of the first line of Hamlet's famous soliloquy, "That is the question." The stresses in that portion of the line are open to a variety of interpretations2
75090069Aesthetic, AestheticsCan be used as an adjective meaning "appealing to the senses." This term's judgment is a phrase synonymous with artistic judgment. As a noun, this is a coherent sense of taste. The kid whose room is painted black, who sleeps in a coffin, and listens only to funeral music has an aesthetic. The kid whose room is filled with pictures of kittens and daisies but who sleeps in a coffin and listens to polka music has a confused aesthetic. The plural noun, aesthetics, is the study of beauty. Questions like what is beauty? or, is the beautiful always good? fall into the category of this term.3
75090070Allegorythis term is a story in which each aspect of the story has a symbolic meaning outside the tale itself. Many fables have an allegorical quality. For example, Aesop's "Ant and the Grasshopper" isn't merely the story of a hardworking ant and a carefree grasshopper. but is also a story about different approaches to living—the thrifty and the devil-may-care. It can also be read as a story about the seasons of summer and winter, which represent a time of prosperity and a time of hardship, or even as representing youth and age. True allegories are even more hard and fast. Bunyan's epic poem, Pilgrim's Progress, is an allegory of the soul, in which each and every part of the tale represents some feature of the spiritual world and the struggles of an individual to lead a Christian life.4
75090071AlliterationThe repetition of initial consonant sounds is called alliteration. In other words, consonant clusters coming closely cramped and compressed—no coincidence.5
75090072AllusionA reference to another work or famous figure. A classical (this term) is a reference to a famous older text such as the Bible, the Illiad, or Paradise Lost. Can be topical or popular as well. A topical (this term) refers to a current event. A popular (this term) refers to something from popular culture, such as a reference to a television show or a hit movie.6
75090073AnachronismThis term is derived from Greek. It means "misplaced in time." If the actor playing Brutus in a production of Julius Caesar forgets to take off his wrist-watch, the effect will be this term.7
75090074AnecdoteAn anecdote is a short narrative.8
75090075AnalogyThis term is a comparison. Usually it involves two or more symbolic parts, and are employed to clarify an action or a relationship. Just as the mother eagle shelters her young from the storm by spreading her great wing above their heads, so does Acme Insurers of America spread an umbrella of coverage to protect its policy-holders from the storms of life.9
75090076AnthropomorphismIn literature, when inanimate objects are given human characteristics, this term is at work. For example, In the forest, the darkness waited for me, I could hear its patient breathing. . . It is often confused with personification. But personification requires that the non-human quality or thing take on human shape.10
75090077Anticlimaxoccurs when an action produces far smaller results than one had been led to expect. this term is frequently comic. Sir, your snide manner and despicable arrogance have long been a source of disgust to me, but I've overlooked it until now. However, it has come to my attention that you have fallen so disgracefully deep into that mire of filth which is your mind as to attempt to besmirch my wife's honor and my good name. Sir, I challenge you to a game of badminton!11
75090078AntiheroA protagonist (main character) who is markedly unheroic: morally weak, cowardly, dishonest, or any number of other unsavory qualities.12
75090079AphorismA short and usually witty saying, such as: "A classic? That's a book that people praise and don't read."13
75090080ApostropheA figure of speech wherein the speaker speaks directly to something nonhuman or to someone or something that simply cannot reply; a dead person, for instance. . In these lines from John Donne's poem "The Sun Rising" the poet scolds the sun for interrupting his nighttime activities: Busy old fool, unruly sun, Why dost thou thus, Through windows, and through curtains call on us?14
75090081ArchaismThe use of deliberately old-fashioned language. Authors sometimes use this to create a feeling of antiquity. Tourist traps use this with a vengeance, as in "Ye Olde andle Shoppe"—Yeech!15
75090082ArchetypeA symbol, usually an image, which recurs often enough in literature to be recognizable as an element of one's literary experience as a whole. Carl Jung used the term to refer to the generalized patterns of images that form the world of human representations in recurrent motifs, passing through the history of all culture. Since they are rooted in the collective unconscious, they may be conceived through the psychic activity of any individual, be it in the form of dreams, art works, the ancient monuments of religious activity, or the contemporary images of commercial advertising.16
75090083AsideA speech (usually just a short comment) made by an actor to the audience, as though momentarily stepping outside of the action on stage. (See soliloquy.)17
75090084AssonanceThe repeated use of vowel sounds, as in, "Old king Cole was a merry old soul."18
75090085AtmosphereThe emotional tone or background that surrounds a scene.19
75090086BalladA long, narrative poem, usually in very regular meter and rhyme. A ballad typically has a naïve folksy quality, a characteristic that distinguishes it from epic poetry.20
75090087Bathos, PathosWhen the writing of a scene evokes feelings of dignified pity and sympathy, pathos is at work. When writing strains for grandeur it can't support and tries to jerk tears from every little hiccup, that's bathos.21
75090088Black humorThis is the use of disturbing themes in comedy. In Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, the two tramps, Didi and Gogo, comically debate over which should commit suicide first, and whether the branches of the tree will support their weight.22
75090089Blank VerseA poem written in unrhymed iambic pentameter. Consider the following from "The Ball Poem" by John Berryman: What is the boy now, who has lost his ball, What, what is he to do? I saw it go Merrily bouncing, down the street, and then Merrily over-there it is in the water!23
75090090BombastThis is pretentious, exaggeratedly learned language. When one tries to be eloquent by using the largest, most uncommon words, one falls into this term.24
75090091BurlesqueThis term is broad parody, one that takes a style or a form, such as tragic drama, and exaggerates it into ridiculousness. A parody usually takes on a specific work, such as Hamlet. For the purposes of the AP test, you can think of the terms parody and burlesque as interchangeable.25
75090092CacophonyIn poetry, this is using deliberately harsh, awkward sounds.26
75090093CadenceThe beat or rhythm of poetry in a general sense. For example, iambic pentameter is the technical name for a rhythm. One sample of predominantly iambic pentameter verse could have a gentle, pulsing (this term), whereas another might have a conversational (this term), and still another might have a vigorous, marching (this term).27
75090094CaesuraA pause within a line of poetry which may or may not affect the metrical count (see #62. meter). In scansion, a caesura is usually indicated by the following symbol (//). Here's an example by Alexander Pope: Know then thyself,//presume not God to scan; The proper study of Mankind//is Man28
75090095CantoThe name for a section division in a long work of poetry. divides a long poem into parts the way chapters divide a novel.29
75090096CaricatureA portrait (verbal or otherwise) that exaggerates a facet of personality.30
75090097CatharsisThis is a term drawn from Aristotle's writings on tragedy. Refers to the "cleansing" of emotion an audience member experiences, having lived (vicariously) through the experiences presented on stage.31
75090098ChorusIn Greek drama, this is the group of citizens who stand outside the main action on stage and comment on it.32
75090099ClassicWhat a troublesome word! Have a number of different uses. Can mean typical, as in oh, that was a classic blunder. It can also mean an accepted masterpiece, for example, Death of Salesman. Finally, classical can also refer to the arts of ancient Greece and Rome, and the qualities of those arts.33
75090100Coinage (neologism)Is a new word, usually one invented on the spot. An author might, in a moment of creative need, coin the term pretarded to convey the sense that someone has been pretentious in an exceptionally stupid way. People's names often become grist for çoinages, as in, Oh, man, you just pulled a major Wilson. Of course, you'd have to know Wilson to know what that means, but you can tell it isn't a goodthing. The technical term for this term is neologism.34
75090101ColloquialismThis is a word or phrase used in everyday conversational English that isn't a part of accepted "school-book" English. For example, I'm toasted. I'm a crispy critter man, and now I've got this wicked headache.35
75090102Conceitcontrolling image In poetry, conceit doesn't mean stuck-up. It refers to a startling or unusual metaphor, or to a metaphor developed and expanded upon over several lines. When the image dominates and shapes the entire work, it's called a metaphysical conceit, or a controlling image.36
75090103ConnotationThe denotation of a word is its literal meaning. The connotations are everything else that the word suggests or implies. For example, in the phrase the dark forest, dark denotes a relative lack of light. The connotation is of danger, or perhaps mystery or quiet; we'd need more information to know for sure, and if we did know with complete certainty that wouldn't be connotation, but denotation. In many cases connotation eventually so overwhelms a word that it takes over the denotation. For example, livid is supposed to denote a dark purple-red color like that of a bruise, but it has been used so often in the context of extreme anger that many people have come to use livid as a synonym for rage, rather than a connotative description of it.37
75090104ConsonanceThe repetition of consonant sounds within words (rather than at their beginnings, which is alliteration). A flock of sick, black-checkered, ducks.38
75090105CoupletA pair of lines that end in rhyme: But at my back I always hear Time's winged chariot hurrying near. —From "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell39
75090106DecorumIn order to observe this term, a character's speech must be styled according to her social station, and in accordance with the occasion. A bum should speak like a bum about bumly things, while a princess should speak only about higher topics (and in a delicate manner).40
75090107Denouementis that part of a drama which follows the climax and leads to the resolution, sometimes synonymous with resolution.41
75090108DictionThe author's choice of words. Whether to use wept or cried is a question of this term. Syntax refers to the ordering and structuring of the words. Whether to say, The pizza was smothered in cheese and pepperoni. I devoured it greedily, or Greedily, I devoured the cheese and pepperoni smothered pizza, is a question of syntax.42
75090109DirgeThis is a song for the dead. Its tone is typically slow, heavy, depressed, and melancholy.43
75090110DissonanceThis refers to the grating of incompatible sounds.44
75090111DoggerelCrude, simplistic verse, often in sing-song rhyme. Limericks are an example of this term.45
75090112ElegyA type of poem that meditates on death or mortality in a serious, thoughtful manner. They often use the recent death of a noted person or loved one as a starting point.46
75090113EmpathyThe imaginative projection into another's feelings, a state of total identification with another's situation, condition, and thoughts. The action of understanding, being aware of, being sensitive to, and vicariously experiencing the feelings, thoughts, and experience of another of either the past or present without explicitly articulating these feelings. Fern empathizes with Wilbur; Charlotte empathizes with Wilbur.47
75090114EnjambmentThe practice named by Ronsard in the 16th century of breaking the sense of a line by placing part of the phrase on the second line. A device in which the phrase end is no longer the end of the line. This practice causes a slight distress in the audience because the reader wants the phrase break to come in the familiar place for the rhythm of the poem but it doesn't. Often the sense of the poem can be changed.48
75090115EpicIn a broad sense, this term is simply a very long narrative poem on a serious theme in a dignified style. They typically deal with glorious or profound subject matter: a great war, a heroic journey, the fall of man from Eden, a battle with supernatural forces, a trip into the underworld, etc. The mock-(this term) is a parody form that deals with mundane events and ironically treats them as worthy of epic poetry.49
75090116EpitaphLines that commemorate the dead at their burial place... is usually a line or handful of lines, often serious or religious, but sometimes witty and even irreverent.50
75090117EuphemismA word or phrase that takes the place of a harsh, unpleasant, or impolite reality. The use of passed away for died, and passed gas for farted are two examples of this term.51
75090118EuphonyWhen sounds blend harmoniously.52
75090119FarceToday we use this word to refer to extremely broad humor. Writers of earlier times used farce as a more neutral term, meaning simply a funny play; a comedy. (And you should know that for writers of centuries past, comedy was the generic term for any play; it did not imply humor.)53
75090120Feminine rhymeLines rhymed by their final two syllables. A pair of lines ending with running and gunning would be an example of feminine rhyme. Properly, in this type of rhyme (and not simply double rhyme) the penultimate syllables are stressed and the final syllables are unstressed.54
75090121FoilA secondary character whose purpose is to highlight the characteristics of a main character, usually by contrast. For example, an author will often give a cynical, quick witted character a docile, naive, sweet-tempered friend to serve as this term.55
75090122FootThe basic rhythmic unit of a line of poetry. Is formed by a combination of two or three syllables, either stressed or unstressed.56
75090123iambA light stress followed by a heavy stress (the winds)57
75090124TrocheeA heavy stress followed by a light stress (flow - er)58
75090125Spondeetwo heavy stresses (Ex, the last two syllables of the line below) When, in / dis - grace / with for - / tune and / men's eyes59
75090126PyrrhicTwo unstressed syllables (See "on their" in the following line) Now sleep - / ing flocks / on their / soft fleec - / es lie.60
75090127AnapestTwo light stresses followed by a heavy (by the dawn's / ear - ly light)61
75090128DactylA heavy stress followed by two light ones (Ex below) green as our / hope in it, / white as our / faith in it62
75090129ForeshadowingAn event or statement in a narrative that in miniature suggests a larger event that comes later.63
75090130Free versePoetry written without a regular rhyme scheme or metrical pattern.64
75090131GenreA sub-category of literature. Science-fiction and detective stories are some examples.65
75090132Gothic, Gothic novelGothic is the sensibility derived from gothic novels, a form that first showed up in the middle of the eighteenth century, had a hey-day of popularity for about sixty years, and hasn't really gone away. The sensibility? Think mysterious gloomy castles perched high upon sheer cliffs. Paintings with sinister eyeballs that follow you around the room. Weird screams from the attic each night. Diaries with a final entry that trails off the page and reads something like, No, NO! IT COULDN'T BE!!66
75090133HubrisThe excessive pride or ambition that leads to the main character's downfall (another term from Aristotle's discussion of tragedy).67
75090134HyperboleExaggeration or deliberate overstatement.68
75090135In medias resLatin for "in the midst of things." One of the conventions of epic poetry is that the action begins in this term. For example, when The Iliad begins, the Trojan war has already been going on for seven years.69
75090136Interior MonologueThis is a term for novels and poetry, not dramatic literature. It refers to writing that records the mental talking that goes on inside a character's head. It is related, but not identical to stream of consciousness. It tends to be coherent, as though the character were actually talking. Stream of consciousness is looser and much more given to fleeting mental impressions.70
75090137InversionSwitching the customary order of elements in a sentence or phrase. When done badly it can give a stilted, artificial, look-at-me-I'm-poetry feel to the verse, but poets do it all the time. This type of messing with syntax is called poetic license. I'll have one large pizza with all the fixin's—presto chango instant poetry— A pizza large I'll have one with the fixin's all.71
75090138IronyThis is one term you need to be very comfortable with for the AP test. This term comes in a variety of forms, and you need to be able to recognize and be sensitive to it. Actually being able to name the specific type of irony involved is not important. ETS doesn't care if you can see an example of tragic (this term) and call it by name, they just want you to be able to see that it's (this term). The reason (this term) shows up so much on the AP test is that it's a powerful verbal tool, and so good writers use it all the time. ETS also love this because ironic writing makes for good questions: strong readers detect irony, weak readers do so less clearly. One definition of irony is a statement that means opposite of what it seems to mean, and while that isn't a bad definition, it doesn't get at the delicacy with which the authors on the AP test use irony. Simply saying the opposite of what one means is sarcasm. The hallmark of irony is an undertow of meaning, sliding against the literal meaning of the words. Jane Austen is famous for writing descriptions which seem perfectly pleasant, but to the sensitive reader have a deliciously mean snap to them. Irony insinuates. It whispers underneath the explicit statement, Do you understand what I really mean? Think of the way Mark Antony says again and again of Brutus, "But he is an honorable man." At first it doesn't seem like much, but with each repetition the undertone of irony becomes ever more insistent.72
75090139LamentA poem of sadness or grief over the death of a loved one or over some other intense loss. Lampoon A satire.73
75090140Loose and periodic sentencesA loose sentence is complete before its end. A periodic sentence is not grammatically complete until it has reached its final phrase. (The term loose does not in any way imply that the sentences are slack or shoddy.)74
75090141Loose sentenceJack loved Barbara despite her irritating snorting laugh, her complaining, and her terrible taste in shoes.75
75090142Periodic sentenceDespite Barbara's irritation at Jack's peculiar habit of picking between his toes while watching MTV and his terrible haircut, she loved him.76
75090143LyricA type of poetry that explores the poet's personal interpretation of and feelings about the world (or the part that his poem is about). When the word lyric is used to describe a emotional tone it refers to a sweet, melodiousness.77
75090144Masculine rhymeA rhyme ending on the final stressed syllable (a.k.a., regular old rhyme).78
75090145Metaphor and similethe first term is a comparison, or analogy that states one thing is another. His eyes were burning coals, or In the morning, the lake is covered in liquid gold. It's a simple point, so keep it straight: the second term, is just like the first but softens the fullout equation of things, often, but not always by using like or as. His eyes were like burning coals, or In the morning the lake is covered in what seems to be liquid gold.79
75090146MeterThe measure of a poetic line. There are many types of meter, designated by the number of feet in a line.80
75090147Pentameterfive feet in a line81
75090148Tetrameterfour feet in a line82
75090149Trimeterthree feet in a line83
75090150Dimetertwo feet in a line84
75090151Hexametersix feet in a line85
75090152Heptameterseven feet in a line86
75090153Octametereight feet in a line87
75090154OdeA poem in praise of something divine or expressing some noble idea. In' "Ode on a Grecian Urn," English poet John Keats expresses his appreciation of the beauty and agelessness of a work by a Grecian artisan: Thou still unravished bride of quietness, Sylvan historian who canst thus express A flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme: What leaf-fringed legend haunts about thy shape Of deities or mortals, or of both In Tempe or the dales of Arcady?88
75090155MetonymyRefers to the substitution of one thing for another closely identified thing, like "the White House" signifying the activities and policies of the president.89
75090156NemesisThe protagonist's arch enemy or supreme and persistent difficulty.90
75090157Objectivity and SubjectivityAn objective treatment of subject matter is an impersonal or outside view of events. A subjective treatment uses the interior or personal view of a single observer and is typically colored with that observer's emotional responses.91
75090158OnomatopoeiaWords that sound like what they mean are examples of onomatopoeia. Boom. Splat. Arrgh. Scritch scritch scritch.92
75090159OxymoronA phrase composed of opposites; a contradiction. Bright black. A calm frenzy. Jumbo shrimp. Dark light. A truthful lie. Some folks claim that military intelligence and House (of Congress) Ethics Committee are some examples.93
75090160ParableLike a fable, or an allegory, it is a story that instructs.94
75090161ParadoxA situation or a statement that seems to contradict itself, but on closer inspection, does not. This line from John Donne's "Holy Sonnet 14" provides an example: That I may rise, and stand, o'erthrow me, The poet paradoxically asks God to knock him down so that he may stand. What he means by this is for God to destroy his present self and remake him as a holier person.95
75090162Parenthetical phraseA phrase set off by commas that interrupts the flow of a sentence with some commentary or added detail. Jack's three dogs, including that miserable, yapping little spaniel, were with him that day.96
75090163ParodyThe work that results when a specific work is exaggerated to ridiculousness.97
75090164PastoralA poem set in tranquil nature or even more specifically, one about shepherds.98
75090165PathosSee bathos.99
75090166Periodic sentenceSee loose sentence.100
75090167PersonaThe narrator in a non first-person novel. In a third person novel, even though the author isn't a character, you get some idea of the author's personality. However, it isn't really the author's personality because the author is manipulating your impressions there as in other parts of the book. This is also called shadow-author.101
75090168PersonificationWhen an inanimate object takes on human shape. The darkness of the forest became the figure of a beautiful, pale-skinned woman in night-black clothes.102
75090169PlaintA poem or speech expressing sorrow.103
75090170PlotThis is the sequence of the main events in a narrative. There are several important elements of this term.104
75090171ConflictThe opposition of the main character with one or more opposing forces. This term is essential to resolution. You can't resolve something that doesn't exist.105
75090172Polysyndetonthe repetition of conjunctions in a series of coordinate words, phrases, or clauses. *I said, "Who killed him?" and he said, "I don't know who killed him but he's dead all right," and it was dark and there was water standing in the street and no lights and windows broke and boats all up in the town and trees blown down and everything all blown and I got a skiff and went out and found my boat where I had her inside Mango Bay and she was all right only she was full of water. Hemingway, After the Storm106
75090173ProtagonistThe main character.107
75090174AntagonistThe character or force(s) that opposes the protagonist.108
75090175ExpositionThe narration that introduces the reader to the situation.109
75090176Rising ActionThe action during which the conflict emerges and builds.110
75090177CrisisThat moment when the reader understands that the conflict will be resolved. This is the turning point in the plot.111
75090178Falling ActionThe portion of the plot that includes the consequences of the crisis.112
75090179Denouement(Unraveling) This event or sequence of events completes the resolution and closes the story.113
75090180Point of ViewThe point of view is the perspective from which the action of a novel (or narrative poem) is presented, whether the action is presented by one character or from different vantage points over the course of the novel. Be sensitive to point of view, because ETS likes to ask questions about it, and they also like to you to mention point of view in your essays. Related to point of view is the narrative form that a novel or story takes. There are a few common narrative positions: • The omniscient narrator This is a third person narrator who each character's mind and understands all thesees, like God, into action going on. • The limited omniscient narrator This is a third person narrator who generally reports only what one character (usually the main character) sees, and who only reports the thoughts of that one privileged character. • The objective, or camera eye narrator This is a third person narrator who only reports on what would be visible to a camera. The objective narrator does not know what the character is thinking unless the character speaks of it. • The first person narrator This a narrator who is a character in the story and tells the tale from his or her point of view. When the first person narrator is crazy, a liar, very young, or for some reason not entirely credible the narrator is unreliable. • The stream of consciousness technique This method is like first person narration but instead of the character telling the story, the author places the reader inside the main character's head and makes the reader privy to all of the character's thoughts as they scroll through her consciousness.114
75090181PreludeAn introductory poem to a longer work of verse.115
75090182QuatrainA four-line stanza. These are the most common stanzaic form in the English language; they can have various meters and rhyme schemes. See also meter, rhyme, stanza.116
75090183RefrainA line or set of lines repeated several times over the course of a poem.117
75090184RequiemA song of prayer for the dead.118
75090185RhapsodyAn intensely passionate verse or section of verse, usually of love or praise.119
75090186Rhetorical questionA question that suggests an answer. In theory, the effect of this term is that it causes the listener to feel she has come up with the answer herself. Well, we can fight it out, or we can run— so, are we cowards?120
75090187SatireThis is an important term for the AP test. ETS is fond of this type of writing, again because it lends itself well to multiple choice questions. This term exposes common character flaws to the cold light of humor. In general, this term attempts to improve things by pointing out people's mistakes in the hope that once exposed, such behavior will become less common. The great (this term) subjects are hypocrisy, vanity, and greed, especially where those all too common characteristics have become institutionalized in society.121
75090188SimileSee metaphor.122
75090189SoliloquyA speech spoken by a character alone on stage. is meant to convey the impression that the audience is listening to the character's thoughts. Unlikean aside, this term is not meant to imply that the actor acknowledges the audience's presence.123
75090190StanzaA group of lines roughly analogous in function in verse to the paragraph's function in prose.124
75090191Stock charactersStandard or cliched character types: the drunk, the miser, the foolish girl, etc. Stream of consciousness See point of view.125
75090192SubjectiveSee objectivity.126
75090193Suspension of disbeliefThe demand made of a theater audience to accept the limitations of staging and supply the details with their imagination. Also, the acceptance on an audience's or reader's part of the incidents of plot in a play or story. If there are too many coincidences or improbable occurrences, the viewer/reader can no longer suspend disbelief and subsequently loses interest.127
75090194Synecdoche(taking one thing out of another) ... is a device in which a part stands for the whole, or a whole for the part, like the expression "All hands on board" to signify that a ship's crew should return to the ship.128
75090195SyntaxWord order and sentence structure.129
75090196ThesisThe main position of an argument. The central contention that will be supported. Tragic flaw In a tragedy, this is the weakness of character in an otherwise good (or even great) individual that ultimately leads to his demise.130
75090197TravestyA grotesque parody.131
75090198Unreliable narratorSee point of view.132
75090199UtopiaAn idealized place. Imaginary communities in which people are able to live in happiness, prosperity, and peace. Several works of fiction have been written about this term.133
75090200Verisimilitudeis achieved by a writer or storyteller when he presents striking details which lend an air of authenticity to a tale. For example, a teenager (not you of course) goes somewhere without her parents permission and tells her parents that she was really at the library. If the teenager adds creative details about what happened while she was there (even though she is making the details up), she is attempting to add this term to her story. Writers of fiction also do this.134
75090201MelodramaA form of cheesy theater in which the hero is very, very good, the villain mean and rotten, and the heroine oh-so-pure. (It sounds dumb, but melodramatic movies make tons of money every year.)135

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