The Glossary of Literary Terms for the AP English Literature and Composition Test
9626647737 | Abstract | Complex, discusses intangible qualities like good and evil, seldom uses examples to support its points. | 0 | |
9626647738 | Academic | Dry and rhetorical writing; sucking all the life out of its subject with analysis. | 1 | |
9626647739 | Accent | In poetry, the stressed portion of a word. | 2 | |
9626647740 | Aesthetic | Appealing to the senses; a coherent sense of taste. | 3 | |
9626647741 | Allegory | A story in which each aspect of the story has a symbolic meaning outside the tale itself. | 4 | |
9626647742 | Alliteration | The repetition of initial consonant sounds. | 5 | |
9626647743 | Allusion | A reference to another work or famous figure. | 6 | |
9626647744 | Anachronism | "Misplaced in time." An aspect of a story that doesn't belong in its supposed time setting. | 7 | |
9626647745 | Analogy | A comparison, usually involving two or more symbolic parts, employed to clarify an action or a relationship. | 8 | |
9626647746 | Anecdote | A Short Narrative | 9 | |
9626647747 | Antecedent | The word, phrase, or clause that determines what a pronoun refers to. | 10 | |
9626647748 | Anticlimax | Occurs when an action produces far smaller results than one had been led to expect. | 11 | |
9626647749 | Antihero | A protagonist who is markedly unheroic: morally weak, cowardly, dishonest, or any number of other unsavory qualities. | 12 | |
9626647750 | Aphorism | A short and usually witty saying. | 13 | |
9626647751 | Apostrophe | A figure of speech wherein the speaker talks directly to something that is nonhuman. | 14 | |
9626647752 | Archaism | The use of deliberately old-fashioned language. | 15 | |
9626647753 | Aside | A speech (usually just a short comment) made by an actor to the audience, as though momentarily stepping outside of the action on stage. | 16 | |
9626647754 | Aspect | A trait or characteristic | 17 | |
9626647755 | Assonance | The repeated use of vowel sounds: "Old king Cole was a merry old soul." | 18 | |
9626647756 | Ballad | A long, narrative poem, usually in meter and rhyme. Typically has a naive folksy quality. | 19 | |
9626647757 | Bathos | Writing strains for grandeur it can't support and tries too hard to be a tear jerker. | 20 | |
9626647758 | Pathos | Writing evokes feelings of dignified pity and sympathy. | 21 | |
9626647759 | Bombast | Pretentious, exaggeratedly learned language. | 22 | |
9626647760 | Burlesque | Broad parody, one that takes a style or form and exaggerates it into ridiculousness. | 23 | |
9626647761 | Cacophony | In poetry, using deliberately harsh, awkward sounds. | 24 | |
9626647762 | Catharsis | Drawn from Aristotle's writings on tragedy. Refers to the "cleansing" of emotion an audience member experiences during a play | 25 | |
9626647763 | Chorus | In Greek drama, the group of citizens who stand outside the main action on stage and comment on it. | 26 | |
9626647764 | Classic | Typical, or an accepted masterpiece. | 27 | |
9626647765 | Colloquialism | A word or phrase used in everyday conversational English that isn't a part of accepted "school-book" English. | 28 | |
9626647766 | Complex (Dense) | Suggesting that there is more than one possibility in the meaning of words; subtleties and variations; multiple layers of interpretation; meaning both explicit and implicit | 29 | |
9626647767 | Conceit (Controlling Image) | A startling or unusual metaphor, or to a metaphor developed and expanded upon several lines. | 30 | |
9626647768 | Denotation | A word's literal meaning. | 31 | |
9626647769 | Connotation | Everything other than the literal meaning that a word suggests or implies. | 32 | |
9626647770 | Consonance | The repetition of consonant sounds within words (rather than at their beginnings) | 33 | |
9626647771 | Couplet | A pair of lines that end in rhyme | 34 | |
9626647772 | Decorum | A character's speech must be styled according to her social station, and in accordance to the situation. | 35 | |
9626647773 | Diction | The words an author chooses to use. | 36 | |
9626647774 | Syntax | The ordering and structuring of words. | 37 | |
9626647775 | Dirge | A song for the dead. Its tone is typically slow, heavy, depressed, and melancholy | 38 | |
9626647776 | Dissonance | Refers to the grating of incompatible sounds. | 39 | |
9626647777 | Dramatic Irony | When the audience knows something that the characters in the drama do not | 40 | |
9626647778 | Dramatic Monologue | When a single speaker in literature says something to a silent audience. | 41 | |
9626647779 | Elegy | A type of poem that meditates on death or mortality in a serious, thoughtful manner. | 42 | |
9626647780 | Enjambment | The continuation of a syntactic unit from one line or couplet of a poem to the next with no pause. | 43 | |
9626647781 | Epic | A very long narrative poem on a serious theme in a dignified style; typically deal with glorious or profound subject matter. | 44 | |
9626647782 | Epitaph | Lines that commemorate the dead at their burial place. | 45 | |
9626647783 | Euphemism | A word or phrase that takes the place of a harsh, unpleasant, or impolite reality. | 46 | |
9626647784 | Farce | Extremely broad humor; in earlier times, a funny play or a comedy. | 47 | |
9626647785 | Foil | A secondary character whose purpose is to highlight the characteristics of a main character, usually by contrast. | 48 | |
9626647786 | Foot | The basic rhythmic unit of a line of poetry, formed by a combination of two or three syllables, either stressed or unstressed. | 49 | |
9626647787 | Foreshadowing | An event of statement in a narrative that in miniature suggests a larger event that comes later. | 50 | |
9626647788 | Free verse | poetry written without a regular rhyme scheme or metrical pattern | 51 | |
9626647789 | Gothic | A sensibility that includes such features as dark, gloomy castles Characterized by gloom and mystery and the grotesque; gothic novels include Frankenstein; uncanny | 52 | |
9626647790 | Hubris | The excessive pride or ambition that leads to the main character's downfall | 53 | |
9626647791 | Hyperbole | Exaggeration or deliberate overstatement. | 54 | |
9626647792 | Implicit | To say or write something that suggests and implies but never says it directly or clearly. | 55 | |
9626647793 | In media res | Latin for "in the midst of things," i.e. beginning an epic poem in the middle of the action. | 56 | |
9626647794 | Interior Monologue | Refers to writing that records the mental talking that goes on inside a character's head; tends to be coherent. | 57 | |
9626647795 | Inversion | Switching the customary order of elements in a sentence or phrase. | 58 | |
9626647796 | Irony | A statement that means the opposite of what it seems to mean; uses an undertow of meaning, sliding against the literal a la Jane Austen. | 59 | |
9626647797 | Lament | A poem of sadness or grief over the death of a loved one or over some other intense loss. | 60 | |
9626647798 | Loose sentence | A sentence that is complete before its end: Jack loved Barbara despite her irritating snorting laugh. | 61 | |
9626647799 | Periodic Sentence | A sentence that is not grammatically complete until it has reached it s final phrase: Despite Barbara's irritation at Jack, she loved him. | 62 | |
9626647800 | Lyric | A type of poetry that explores the poet's personal interpretation of and feelings about the world. | 63 | |
9626647801 | Melodrama | A form of cheesy theater in which the hero is very, very good, the villain mean and rotten, and the heroine oh-so-pure. | 64 | |
9626647802 | Metaphor | A comparison or analogy that states one thing IS another. | 65 | |
9626647803 | Simile | A comparison or analogy that typically uses like or as. | 66 | |
9626647804 | Metonymy | A word that is used to stand for something else that it has attributes of or is associated with. | 67 | |
9626647805 | Objectivity | Treatment of subject matter in an impersonal manner or from an outside view. | 68 | |
9626647806 | Subjectivity | A treatment of subject matter that uses the interior or personal view of a single observer and is typically colored with that observer's emotional responses. | 69 | |
9626647807 | Onomatopoeia | Words that sound like what they mean | 70 | |
9626647808 | Opposition | A pairing of images whereby each becomes more striking and informative because it's placed in contrast to the other one. | 71 | |
9626647809 | Oxymoron | A phrase composed of opposites; a contradiction. | 72 | |
9626647810 | Parable | A story that instructs. | 73 | |
9626647811 | Paradox | A situation or statement that seems to contradict itself, but on closer inspection, does not. | 74 | |
9626647812 | Parallelism | Repeated syntactical similarities used for effect. | 75 | |
9626647813 | Paraphrase | To restate phrases and sentences in your own words. | 76 | |
9626647814 | Parenthetical phrase | A phrase set off by commas that interrupts the flow of a sentence with some commentary or added detail. | 77 | |
9626647815 | Parody | The work that results when a specific work is exaggerated to ridiculousness. | 78 | |
9626647816 | Pastoral | A poem set in tranquil nature or even more specifically, one about shepherds. | 79 | |
9626647817 | Persona | The narrator in a non first-person novel. | 80 | |
9626647818 | Point of View | The perspective from which the action of a novel is presented. | 81 | |
9626647819 | Omniscient | A third person narrator who sees into each character's mind and understands all the action going on. | 82 | |
9626647820 | Limited Omniscient | A Third person narrator who generally reports only what one character sees, and who only reports the thoughts of that one privileged character. | 83 | |
9626647821 | Objective | A thrid person narrator who only reports on what would be visible to a camera. Does not know what the character is thinking unless the character speaks it. | 84 | |
9626647822 | First person | A narrator who is a character in the story and tells the tale from his or her point of view. | 85 | |
9626647823 | Stream of Consciousness | 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. | 86 | |
9626647824 | Prelude | An introductory poem to a longer work of verse | 87 | |
9626647825 | Protagonist | The main character of a novel or play | 88 | |
9626647826 | Pun | The usually humorous use of a word in such a way to suggest two or more meanings | 89 | |
9626647827 | Refrain | A line or set of lines repeated several times over the course of a poem. | 90 | |
9626647828 | Requiem | A song of prayer for the dead. | 91 | |
9626647829 | Rhapsody | An intensely passionate verse or section of verse, usually of love or praise. | 92 | |
9626647830 | Satire | Attempts to improve things by pointing out people's mistakes in the hope that once exposed, such behavior will become less common. | 93 | |
9626647831 | Soliloquy | A speech spoken by a character alone on stage, meant to convey the impression that the audience is listening to the character's thoughts. | 94 | |
9626647832 | Stanza | A group of lines roughly analogous in function in verse to the paragraphs function in prose. | 95 | |
9626647833 | Symbolism | A device in literature where an object represents an idea. | 96 | |
9626647834 | Theme | The main idea of the overall work; the central idea. | 97 | |
9626647835 | Thesis | The main position of an argument. The central contention that will be supported. | 98 | |
9626647836 | Tragic flaw | In a tragedy, this is the weakness of a character in an otherwise good (or even great) individual that ultimately leads to his demise. | 99 | |
9626647837 | Truism | A way-too obvious truth | 100 | |
9626647838 | Unreliable narrator | When the first person narrator is crazy, a liar, very young, or for some reason not entirely credible | 101 | |
9626647839 | Utopia | An idealized place. Imaginary communities in which people are able to live in happiness, prosperity, and peace. | 102 | |
9626647840 | Ode | A poem in praise of something divine or noble | 103 | |
9626647841 | Iamb | A poetic foot -- light, heavy | 104 | |
9626647842 | Pentameter | A poetic line with five feet. | 105 | |
9626647843 | Blank Verse | unrhymed iambic pentameter. | 106 |