11802366194 | Allegory | A work that functions on a symbolic level. | 0 | |
11802376258 | Alliteration | The repetition of initial constant sounds, such as "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers." | 1 | |
11802417119 | Allusion | A reference contained in a work. | 2 | |
11807198044 | Anapest | A metrical pattern of two unaccented syllables followed by an accented syllable. | 3 | |
11802574747 | Antagonist | The force or character that opposes the main character, the antgonist. | 4 | |
11802617500 | Apostrophe | Direct address in poetry. Year's line "Be with me Beauty, For the fire is dying" is a good example. | 5 | |
11802894364 | Aside | Words spoken by an actor intended to be heard by the audience but not by other characters on stage. | 6 | |
11802926918 | Aubade | A love poem set at dawn which bids farewell to the beloved. | 7 | |
11802944046 | Ballad | A simple narrative poem, often incorporating dialogue that is written in quatrains, generally with a rhyme scheme of a b c d. | 8 | |
11802979110 | Blank Verse | Unrhymed iambic pentameter. Most of shakespeare's plays are in this form. | 9 | |
11803072946 | Cacophony | Harsh and discordant sounds in a line or passage of literary work. | 10 | |
11803093098 | Caesura | A break or pause within a line of poetry indicated by punctuation and used to emphasize meaning. | 11 | |
11803131738 | Catharsis | according to Aristotle, the release of emotion that the audience of a tragedy experiences. | 12 | |
11803136155 | Character | One who carries out the action of the plot in literature. Major, minor, static, and dynamic are types of characters. | 13 | |
11803160956 | Climax | The turning point of action or character in literary work, usually the highest moment of tension. | 14 | |
11803214663 | Comic Relief | the inclusion of a humorous character or scene to contrast with the tragic elements of a work, thereby intensifying the next tragic event. | 15 | |
11803231357 | Conflict | a clash between opposing forces in a literary work, such as man vs. man; man vs. nature; man vs. God; man vs. self. | 16 | |
11803239470 | Connotation | the interpretive level of a word based on its associated images rather than its literal meaning. | 17 | |
11803249649 | Convention | A traditional aspect of a literary work, such as a soliloquy in a Shakespearean play or a tragic hero in a Greek tragedy. | 18 | |
11803257174 | Couplet | Two lines of rhyming poetry; often used by Shakespeare to conclude a scene or an important passage. | 19 | |
11803277929 | Dactyle | A foot of poetry consisting of a stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables. | 20 | |
11803307314 | Denotation | The literal or dictionary meaning of a word. | 21 | |
11803321055 | Denouement | the conclusion or tying up of loose ends in a literary work; the resolution of the conflict and plot. | 22 | |
11803332533 | Deus Ex Machina | A Greek invention, literally "the god from the machine" who appears at the last moment and resolves the loose ends of a play. Today, the term refers to anyone, usually of some stature, who untangles, resolves, or reveals the key to the plot of a work. See the conclusion of Euripides's Medea for an example or the sheriff at the end of Desire Under the Elms by O'Neill. | 23 | |
11803390932 | Diction | The author's choice of words. | 24 | |
11803399723 | Dramatic Monologue | A type of poem that presents a conversion between a speaker and an implied listener. Browning's "My Last Duchess" is a perfect example. | 25 | |
11803430193 | Elegy | A poem that laments the dead or loss. "Elegy for Jane" by Roethke is a specific example. Gray's "Elegy in a Country Church Yard" is a general example. | 26 | |
11803468628 | Enjambment | A Technique in poetry that involves the running on of a line or stanza. It enables the poem to move and to develop coherence as well as directing the reader with regard to form and meaning. Walt Whitman uses this continually. | 27 | |
11803510283 | Epic | a lengthy, elevated poem that celebrates the exploits of a hero. Beowulfis a prime example . | 28 | |
11803523253 | Epigram | A brief witty poem. Pope often utilizes this form for satiric commentary. | 29 | |
11803546259 | Euphony | The pleasant, mellifluous presentation of sounds in literary work. | 30 | |
11803608169 | Exposition | Background information presented in a literary work. | 31 | |
11803611325 | Fable | A simple, symbolic story, usually employing animals as characters. Aesop and La Fontaine are authors who excel at this form. | 32 | |
11803676532 | Figurative Language | The body of devices that enables the writer to operate on level other than the literal one. It includes metaphor, simile, symbol, hyperbole, and others. | 33 | |
11803750023 | Flashback | a device that enables a writer to refer to past thoughts, events, or episodes. | 34 | |
11803766419 | Foot | A metrical unit in poetry; a syllabic measure of a line: iamb, trochee, anapest, dactyl, and spondee. | 35 | |
11803782382 | Foreshadowing | hints of future events in a literary work. | 36 | |
11803790291 | Form | The shape or structure of a literary work. | 37 | |
11803806594 | Free Verse | Poetry without a defined form, meter, or rhyme scheme. | 38 | |
11803816083 | Hyperbole | Extreme exaggeration. In "My Love is Like a Red, Red Rose" Burns speaks of loving "until all the seas run dry. | 39 | |
11803864813 | Iamb | a metrical foot consisting of an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one; The most common poetic foot in English language. | 40 | |
11803897000 | Idyll | A type of lyric poem which extols the virtues of an ideal place or time. | 41 | |
11803923720 | Image | A verbal approximation of a sensory impression, concept, or emotion. | 42 | |
11803955767 | Imagery | The total effect of related sensory images in a work of literature. | 43 | |
11803968013 | Impressionism | writing that reflects a personal image of a character, event, or concept. The Secret Sharer is a fine example. | 44 | |
11803984302 | Irony | An unexpected twist or contrast between what happens and what was intended or expected to happen. It involves dialogue and situation, and it can be intentional or unplanned. Dramatic irony centers around the ignorance of those involved while the audience is aware of the circumstance. | 45 | |
11804057718 | Lyric Poetry | a type of poetry characterized by emotion, personal feelings, and brevity; a large and inclusive category of poetry that exhibits rhyme, meter, and reflective thought. | 46 | |
11804071144 | Magical Realism | a type of literature that explores narratives by and about characters who inhabit and experience their reality differently from what we term the objective world. Writers who are frequently placed in this category include Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Gunter Grass, and Isabel Allende. | 47 | |
11804103013 | Metaphor | A direct comparison between dissimilar things. "Yours eyes are stars" is an example. | 48 | |
11804121438 | Metaphorical Poetry | Refers to the work of poets like John Donne who explore highly complex, philosophical ideas through extended metaphors and paradox. | 49 | |
11804152697 | Meter | A pattern of beats in Poetry. | 50 | |
11804161936 | Metonymy | a figure of speech in which a representative term is used for a larger idea. (The pen is , mightierthan the sword.") | 51 | |
11804194903 | Monologue | A speech given by one character. (Hamlet's "To be or not to be.") | 52 | |
11804233911 | Motif | the repetition or variations of an image or idea in a work used to develop theme or characters. | 53 | |
11804242918 | Narrative Poem | a poem that tells a story. | 54 | |
11805090621 | Narrator | The speaker of a literary work. | 55 | |
11804246111 | Octave | an eight-line stanza, usually combined with a sestet in a Petrarchan sonnet. | 56 | |
11804635220 | Ode | A formal, lengthy poem that that celebrates a particular subject. | 57 | |
11804647699 | Onomatopoeia | Words that sound like the sound they represent (hiss, gurgle, bang.) | 58 | |
11804681291 | Oxymoron | an image of contradictory terms (bittersweet, pretty ugly, giant economy size.) | 59 | |
11804693994 | Parable | a story that operates on more than one level and usually teaches a moral lesson. (The Pearl by John Steinbeck is a fine example.see Allegory.) | 60 | |
11804704106 | Paradox | A set seemingly contradictory elements which nevertheless reflects an underlying truth. For example, in Shakespeare's Much Ado about about Nothing, the Friar says to Hero, "Come lady, die to live." | 61 | |
11805078066 | Parallel Plot | a secondary story line that mimics and reinforces the main plot. (Hamlet loses his father, as does Ophelia.) | 62 | |
11805098433 | Parody | A comic imitation of work that ridicules the original. | 63 | |
11805102086 | Pathos | the aspects of a literary work that elicit pity from the audience. | 64 | |
11805104157 | Personification | the assigning of human qualities to inanimate objects or concepts. (Wordsworth personifies "the sea that bares her bosom to the moon" in the poem "London 1812.") | 65 | |
11805115001 | Plot | A sequence of events in a literary work. | 66 | |
11805119091 | Point of view | The method of narration in a work. | 67 | |
11805121620 | Protagonist | The hero or main character of a literary work, the character the audience sympathizes with. | 68 | |
11805130052 | Quatrain | A four-line stanza. | 69 | |
11805133032 | Resolution | the denouement of a literary work. | 70 | |
11805136955 | Rhetorical Question | A question that does not expect an explicit answer. It is used to pose an idea to be considered by the speaker or audience. | 71 | |
11805142819 | Rhyme/Rime | the duplication of final syllable sounds in two or more lines. | 72 | |
11805144431 | Rhyme Scheme | The annotation of the pattern of the rhyme. | 73 | |
11805147290 | Rhythm | The repetitive pattern of beats in poetry. | 74 | |
11805152939 | Romanticism | a style or movement of literature that has as its foundation an interest in freedom, adventure, idealism, and escape. | 75 | |
11805158606 | Satire | a mode of writing based on ridicule, which criticizes the foibles and follies of society without necessarily offering a solution. (Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels is a great satire that exposes mankind's condition.) | 76 | |
11805173856 | Scansion | analysis of a poem's rhyme and meter. | 77 | |
11805182224 | Sestet | a six-line stanza, usually paired with an octave to form a Petrarchan sonnet. | 78 | |
11805189189 | Sestina | A highly structured poetic form of 39 lines, written in iambic pentameter. It depends upon the repetition of six words from the first stanza in each of six stanzas. | 79 | |
11805191054 | Setting | The time and place of a literary work. | 80 | |
11805194235 | Simile | An indirect comparison that uses the word, "like" or "as" to link the differing items in the comparison. ("Your eyes are like stars.") | 81 | |
11805235539 | Soliloquy | A speech in a play that is used to reveal the character's inner thoughts to the audience. (Hamlet's To be or not to be. . ." is one of the most famous soliloquies in literature.) | 82 | |
11805204432 | Sonnet | a 14-line poem with a prescribed rhyme scheme in iambic pentameter. | 83 | |
11805209465 | Spondee | A poetic foot consisting of two accented syllables (' ') | 84 | |
11805217432 | Stage Directions | The Specific instructions a playwright includes concerning sets, characterization, delivery etc. | 85 | |
11805223148 | Stanza | a unit of a poem, similar in rhyme, meter, and length to other units in the poem. | 86 | |
11805224895 | Structure | the organization and form of a work. | 87 | |
11805247976 | Style | the unique way an author presents his ideas. Diction, syntax, imagery, structure, and content all contribute to a particular style. | 88 | |
11805251699 | Subplot | A secondary plot that explores ideas different from the main storyline. (In Hamlet, the main storyline has a hamlet avenging the death of his father. The subplot has Hamlet dealing with his love for Ophelia.) | 89 | |
11805269500 | Subtext | Implied meaning of a work or section of a work. | 90 | |
11805271321 | Symbol | Something in a literary work that stands for something else. (Plato has the light of the sun symbolize truth in "The Allegory of the Cave.") | 91 | |
11805281507 | Synecdoche | A figure of speech that utilizes a part as represenative of a whole. | 92 | |
11805293363 | Syntax | The grammatical structure of prose and poestry. | 93 | |
11805296143 | Tercet | A three-line stanza. | 94 | |
11805299936 | Theme | The underlying ideas that the author illustrates through characterization, motifs, language, plot, etc. | 95 | |
11805306024 | Tone | The authors attitude toward the subject. | 96 | |
11805307905 | Tragic Hero | According to Aristotle, a basically good person of noble birth or exalted position who has a fatal flaw or commits an error in judgement which leads to his downfall. the tragic hero must have a moment of realization and live and suffer. | 97 | |
11805324897 | Trochee | A single metrical foot consisting of one accented (stressed/long) syllable followed by one unaccented (unstressful/short) syllable. | 98 | |
11805332656 | Understatement | the opposite of exaggeration. It is a technique for developing irony and/or humor where one writes or says less than intended. | 99 | |
11805335241 | Villanelle | A highly structured poetic form that comprises six stanzas: five tercets and a quatrain. The poem repeats the first and third lines throughout. | 100 |
AP Literature- Literary Terms Flashcards
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