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AP Literature - Key Terminology Flashcards

Key terms in AP English Literature and Composition from the Kaplan study guide.

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3132972099allegorya prose or poetic narrative in which the characters, behavior, or setting demonstrate multiple levels of meaning or significance0
3132972100alliterationthe sequential repetition of a similar initial sound1
3132972101allusiona reference to a literary or historical event, person, or place2
3132972102anapestica metrical foot in poetry that consists of two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed one: "Twas the NIGHT before CHRISTmas"3
3132972103anaphorathe regular repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases or clauses4
3132972104anecdotea brief story or tale told by a character in a piece of literature5
3132972105antagonistany character or force that is in opposition to the main character, or protagonist6
3132972106antithesisthe juxtaposition of sharply contrasting ideas in balanced or parallel words7
3132972107apostrophean address or invocation to something that is inanimate8
3132972108archetypesrecurrent designs, patterns of action, character types, themes, or images which are identifiable in a wide range of literature9
3132972109assonancea repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds10
3132972110asyndetona style in which conjunctions are omitted11
3132972111attitudethe sense expressed by the tone of voice and/or mood of a piece of writing12
3132972112ballada narrative poem that is, or originally was, meant to be sung13
3132972113ballad stanzaa common stanza form, consisting of a quatrain (stanza of four lines) that alternates four-beat (iambic tetrameter) and three-beat (iambic trimeter) lines: "In SCARlet TOWN where I was BORN/ there LIVED a FAIR maid DWELLin'"14
3132972114blank versethe verse form that most resembles common speech, consisting of unrhymed lines in iambic pentameter15
3132972115caesuraa pause in a line of verse, indicated by natural speech patterns rather than specific metrical patterns16
3132972116caricaturea depiction in which a character's characteristics or features are so deliberately exaggerated as to render them absurd17
3132972117chiasmusa figure of speech by which the order of the terms in the first of two parallel clauses is reversed in the second: "Pleasure is a sin, and sometimes sin's a pleasure."18
3132972118colloquialordinary language, the vernacular19
3132972119conceita comparison of two unlikely things that is drawn out within a piece of literature, particularly a piece of extended metaphor within a poem20
3132972120connotationwhat is suggested by a word, apart from what it implicitly describes21
3132972121consonancethe repetition of a sequence of two or more consonants, but with a change in the intervening vowels: "pitter-patter, pish-posh"22
3132972122couplettwo rhyming lines of iambic pentameter that together present a single idea or connections: "So long as men can breathe or eyes can see/So long lives this and this gives life to thee."23
3132972123dactylica metrical foot in poetry consisting of two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed syllable: "Everywhere, everywhere, Christmas tonight."24
3132972124denotationa direct or specific meaning, often referred to as the dictionary meaning of a word25
3132972125dialectthe language and speech idiosyncrasies of a specific area, region, or group of people26
3132972126dictionthe specific word choice an author uses to persuade or convey tone27
3132972127dramatic monologuea monologue set in a specific situation and spoken to an imaginary audience; soliloquy28
3132972128elegya poetic lament upon the death of a particular person, usually ending in consolation29
3132972129enjambmentthe continuation of a sentence from one line or couplet of a poem to the next30
3132972130epica poem that celebrates, in a continuous narrative, the achievements of mighty heroes and heroines, often concerned with the founding of a nation or developing of a culture31
3132972131expositionthat part of the structure that sets the scene, introduces or identifies characters, and establishes the situation at the beginning of a story or play32
3132972132extended metaphora detailed or complex metaphor that extends over a long section of a work, also known as a conceit33
3132972133fablea legend or short story often using animals as characters34
3132972134falling actionthat part of plot structure in which the complications of the rising action are untangled; also known as the denouement35
3132972135farcea play or scene in a play or book that is characterized by broad humor, wild antics, and often slapstick or physical jokes36
3132972136flashbackretrospection, where an earlier event is inserted into the normal chronology of the narrative37
3132972137foreshadowingto hint at or to present an indication of the future beforehand38
3132972138formal dictionlanguage that is lofty, dignified, and impersonal39
3132972139free versepoetry that is characterized by varying line lengths, lack of traditional meter, and non-rhyming lines40
3132972140genrea type or class of literature such as epic or narrative poetry or belles lettres41
3132972141hyperboleoverstatement characterized by exaggerated language42
3132972142iambica metrical foot in poetry that consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable: "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?/Thou art more lovely and more temperate."43
3132972143idylla short poem describing a country or pastoral scene, praising the simplicity of rustic life44
3132972144imageryany sensory detail or invocation in a work; also, the use of figurative language to evoke a feeling, call to mind an idea, or describe and object45
3132972145informal dictionlanguage that is not as lofty or impersonal as formal diction; similar to everyday speech46
3132972146in medias res"in the midst of things"; refers to opening a story in the middle of the action, necessitating filling in past details by exposition or flashback47
3132972147ironya situation or statement characterized by significant difference between what is expected or understood and what actually happens or is meant48
3132972148jargonspecialized or technical language of a trade, profession, or similar group49
3132972149juxtapositionthe location of one thing as being adjacent or juxtaposed with another, to create a certain effect50
3132972150limited point of viewa perspective confined to a single character, whether a first person or a third person51
3132972151litotea figure of speech that emphasizes its subject by conscious understatement: "Last week I saw a woman flayed and you would hardly believe how it altered her appearance for the worse."52
3132972152loose sentencea sentence grammatically complete and usually stating its main idea before the end53
3132972153lyricoriginally designated poems meant to be sung to the accompaniment of a lyre; now any short poem in which the speaker expresses intense personal emotion rather than describing a narrative or dramatic situation54
3132972154messagea misleading term for theme; the central statement or idea of a story, misleading because it suggests a simple, packaged statement that pre-exists and for the simple communication of which the story was written55
3132972155metaphorone thing pictured as if it were something else, suggesting a likeness or analogy between them56
3132972156meterthe more or less regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry57
3132972157metonymya figure of speech in which an attribute or commonly associated feature is used to name or designate something: "The White House announced today," "The pen is mightier than the sword."58
3132972158mooda feeling or ambiance resulting from the tone of the piece as well as the writer/narrator's attitude and point of view59
3132972159motifa recurrent device, formula, or situation that often serves as a signal for the appearance of a character or event60
3132972160narrative structurea textual organization based on sequences of connected events, usually presented in a straightforward, chronological framework61
3132972161narratorthe character who "tells" the story, or in poetry, the persona62
3132972162occasional poema poem written about or for a specific occasion, public or private63
3132972163odea lyric poem that is somewhat serious in subject and treatment, is elevated in style, and sometimes uses elaborate stanza structure, which is often patterned in sets of three; often written to praise or exalt a person, quality, characteristic, or object64
3132972164omniscient point of viewalso called unlimited focus; a perspective that can be seen from one character's view, then another's, then another's and can be moved at any time65
3132972165onomatopoeiaa word capturing or approximating the sound of what it describes: "buzz," "clank"66
3132972166overstatementexaggerated language also called hyperbole67
3132972167oxymorona figure of speech that combines to apparently contradictory elements: "jumbo shrimp," "deafening silence"68
3132972168parablea short fictional story that illustrates an explicit moral lesson through the use of analogy69
3132972169paradoxa statement that seems contradictory but may actually be true: "fight for peace"70
3132972170parallel structurethe use of similar forms in writing for nouns, verbs, phrases, or thoughts: "Jane likes reading, writing, and skiing," NOT "Martha takes notes quickly, thoroughly, and in a detailed manner."71
3132972171parodya work that imitates another work for comic effect by exaggerating the style and changing the content of the original72
3132972172pastorala work that describes the simple life of country folk, usually shepherds who live a timeless, painless life in a world full of beauty, music, and love; also called an eclogue, a bucolic, or and idyll73
3132972173periodic sentencea sentence that is not grammatically complete until the end: "The child, who looked as if she were being chased by demons, ran."74
3132972174personificationtreating an abstraction or nonhuman object as if it were a person by endowing it with human qualities75
3132972175personathe voice or figure of the author who tells and structures the story and who may or may not share the values of the actual author (e.g. adult Scout in 'To Kill a Mockingbird,' Watson in 'Sherlock Holmes')76
3132972176Petrarchan sonneta sonnet form that divides the poem into one section of eight lines (octave) and a second section of six lines (sestet) usually following the abba abba cde cde rhyme scheme; also called an Italian sonnet77
3132972177plotthe arrangement of the narration based on the cause-effect relationship of the events78
3132972178protagonistthe main character in a work, who may or may not be heroic79
3132972179quatraina poetic stanza of four lines80
3132972180realismthe practice in literature of attempting to describe nature and life without idealism and with attention to detail81
3132972181refraina repeated stanza or line(s) in a poem or song82
3132972182rhetorical questiona question that is simply asked for stylistic effect and is not expected to be answered83
3132972183rhymethe repetition of the same or similar sounds, most often at the ends of lines84
3132972184rhythmthe modulation of weak and strong elements in the flow of speech85
3132972185rising actionthe development of action in a work, usually at the beginning86
3132972186sarcasma form of verbal irony in which apparent praise is actually harshly or bitterly critical87
3132972187satirea literary work that holds up human failings to ridicule and censure88
3132972188scansionthe analysis of verse to show its meter89
3132972189settingthe time and place of the action in a story, poem, or play90
3132972190Shakespearean sonneta sonnet form that divides the poem into three units of four lines each and a final unit of two lines, usually abab cdcd efef gg; also called an English sonnet91
3132972191shaped verseanother name for concrete poetry, poetry that is shaped to look like an object92
3132972192similea direct, explicit comparison of one thing to another, using the words 'like' or 'as'93
3132972193soliloquya monologue in which the character in a play is alone and speaking only to himself or herself94
3132972194speakerthe person, not necessarily the author, who is the voice of a poem95
3132972195stanzaa section of a poem demarcated by extra line spacing96
3132972196couplettwo-line stanza97
3132972197tercetthree-line stanza98
3132972198quatrainfour-line stanza99
3132972199cinquainfive-line stanza100
3132972200sestetsix-line stanza101
3132972201heptatichseven-line stanza102
3132972202octaveeight-line stanza103
3132972203stereotypea characterization based on conscious or unconscious assumptions that some aspect, such as gender, age, ethnic or national identity, religion, occupation, marital status, and so on, are predictable accompanied by certain character traits, action, and even values104
3132972204Everyman charactermain character that actually represents all people105
3132972205stock charactercharacter who appears in a number of stories or plays such as the cruel stepmother, the femme fatale, etc.106
3132972206structurethe organization or arrangement of the various elements in a work107
3132972207stylea distinctive manner of expression108
3132972208symbola person, place, thing, event, or pattern in a literary work that designates itself and at the same time figuratively represents or "stands for" something else109
3132972209synecdochewhen a part is used to signify a whole: "All hands on deck," "He stole five hundred head of longhorns."110
3132972210syntaxthe way words are put together to form phrases, clauses, and sentences111
3132972211terza rimaa verse form consisting of three-line stanzas in which the second line of each rhymes with the first and third of the next, in the form ababcb112
3132972212themea generalized, abstract paraphrase of the inferred central or dominant idea or concern of a work113
3132972213tonethe attitude a literary work takes toward its subject and theme114
3132972214tragedya drama in which a character (usually good and noble and of high rank) is brought to a disastrous end in his or her confrontation with a superior force due to a fatal flaw in his or her character115
3132972215trochaica metrical foot in poetry that is the opposite of iambic, with the first syllable stressed and the second not: "BY the SHORES of GITCHee GUMee,/BY the SHINing BIG-Sea-WATer"116
3132972216turning pointthe third part of plot structure, the point at which the action stops rising and begins falling or reversing; also called the climax117
3132972217villanellea verse form consisting of 19 lines divided into six stanzas - five tercets and one quatrain; the first and third lines of the first tercet rhyme, and this rhyme is repeated through each of the next four tercets and in the last two lines of the concluding quatrain118
3132972218voicethe acknowledged or unacknowledged source of the words of the story; the "person" telling the story or poem119

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