6685055091 | apprehensive | anxious or fearful that something bad or unpleasant will happen | 0 | |
6685078132 | placid | (of a person or animal) not easily upset or excited | 1 | |
6685078133 | irate | feeling or characterized by great anger | 2 | |
6685081114 | balanced sentences | a sentence that has two clauses ex: Buy a bucket of chicken and have a barrel of fun. | 3 | |
6685081115 | loose sentences | A loose sentence (also called a cumulative sentence) is a type of sentence in which the main idea (independent clause) is elaborated by the successive addition of modifying clauses or phrases ex: She drove her car to go to the movies, and got gas | 4 | |
6685083153 | periodic sentences | a stylistic device employed at the sentence level, described as one that is not complete grammatically or semantically before the final clause or phrase. ex: To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men, that is genius. | 5 | |
6685083154 | concrete details | identifies things perceived through the senses (touch, smell, sight, hearing, and taste), such as soft, stench, red, loud, or bitter. | 6 | |
6685085596 | gustatory imagery | The definition of gustatory imagery is words or pictures that make someone think of food or taste. An example of gustatory imagery is a picture of a chocolate cake making someone imagine what the cake tastes like. | 7 | |
6685085597 | compound sentences | two independent sentences put together with FANBOYS | 8 | |
6685085598 | complex sentences | one independent one dependent clause | 9 | |
6685088590 | compound-complex sentences | A sentence consisting of at least one dependent clauses and at least two independent clauses may be called a complex-compound sentence or compound-complex sentence. | 10 | |
6685088591 | anastrophe | Anastrophe is a figure of speech in which the syntactically correct order of subject, verb and object is changed. ex: potatoes, I like. | 11 | |
6685088592 | epistrophe | indicates the same word returns at the end of each sentence. | 12 | |
6685091671 | onomatopoeia | a word that sounds like what it represents | 13 | |
6685091672 | metonymy | the substitution of the name of an attribute or adjunct for that of the thing meant, for example suit for business executive, or the track for horse racing. | 14 | |
6685289701 | anaphora | Anaphora is the opposite of epistrophe and means the repetition of the same phrase or word at the beginning of successive sentences such as in this example | 15 |
AP Literature Vocab Flashcards
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