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AP Terms List #5-Figurative Language

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132623556FIGURATIVE LANGUAGEwritten expression or language that is NOT meant to be taken literally. Most language is of a figurative nature(i.e. "you drive me up the wall")
132623557SIMILEa comparison of two distinctly different things using "like" or "as" (i.e. "my love is like a red, red rose")
132623558METAPHORa direct comparison of two things; when a word or expression, which in literal usage denotes one kind of thing or action is applied to a distinctly different kind of thing or action ("Men are pigs")
132623559METONYMYa type of metaphor; when the ltieral term for one thing is applied to another with which it has been closely associated (i.e. "The White House released an announcement today regarding the budget crisis")
132623560SYNECHDOCHEa type of metaphor; when a part of something is used to signify the whole (i.e. "The Angels have several good arms on their pitching staff")
132623561HYPERBOLEThe use of extreme exaggeration to make a point (i.e. I called her a thousand times last night!")
132623562LITOTESA form of understatement (i.e. "he's not the brightest man in the world")
132623563PERSONIFICATIONA type of metaphor that gives human qualities to animals or inanimate objects (i.e. The stars winked at me")
132623564APOSTROPHEA rhetorical figure of speech that allows the speaker to address an absent person or inanimate entity (i.e. "Oh Spring, why are you so brief")
132623565CONCEITa figure of speech (an elaborate and extended metaphor) that draws an elaborate parallel between dissimilar things (i.e. Donne's "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" is an example of metaphysical conceit while simpler (Petrarchan) conceits will be used in a poem to compare a tumultuous love affair with a ship on a stormy sea)
132623566PARADOXA statement which at first seems to be self-contradictory or absurd, but in the end actually makes sense (i.e. "A person who aims at nothing is sure to hit it")
132623567OXYMORONWhen two paradoxical contradictory terms are joined together (i.e. "She gives me pleasing pains")
132623568end rhymethe most frequent use of rhyme-it occurs at the end of a verse-line
132623569near(slant) rhymerhyme that uses similar, but not exact sounds groaned/crooned/ground
132623570masculine rhymerhyme that consists of one single stressed syllable (still, hill/war, bore
132623571feminine rhymerhyme that consists of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable (ending, bending)
132623572internal rhymerhyme that occurs within the same line of poetry ("in mist or cloud, on mast or shroud").
132623573refraina line or group of lines which is repeated in the course of a poem, sometimes with slight changes, and usually at the end of a stanza (i.e. Poe's The Raven: "Quoth the raven: nevermore")
132623574repetitiona poet's repeated use of a word, symbol, or motif
132623575euphonypleasant sounds created by words
132623576cacophonydiscordant sounds created by words
132623577onomatopoeiawords whose sounds reveal their meaning (buzz, whack, and whisper
132623578assonancerepetitious, stressed vowel sounds within a line of poetry (Hide the rinds by the driveway)
132623579consonancerepetitious, final consonant sound within a line of poetry (pretend your kind is found to surrender around the sun)
132623580alliterationrepetitious use of initial consonant sound within a line of poetry (Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers)
132623581enjambmentthe act of continuous thought as it flows from one line of poetry to the next

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