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AP Literature Poetry Terms Flashcards

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3166944381LineA vertical grouping (or lack thereof) of words in a poem0
3166946984StanzaA group of lines in a poem1
3166946985RefrainRepetition of a line or group of lines throughout the poem (think of a song!)2
3166949702CoupletA group of two lines that usually rhyme and have the same rhythm "Your breath makes me want to puke/Your hygiene I must rebuke"3
3166955336Heroic CoupletTwo lines of rhymed iambic pentameter "I know when you do not bother to read/SparkNotes and Shmoop will just make your grade bleed"4
3166960888TercetA group of of rhymed or unrhymed three lines5
3166962956QuatrainA group of four lines (then sextet, octet/octave, etc)6
3166965003CinquainA five line poem in which the syllable count increases in each line from two to four to six to eight then back to two7
3166969101CantoA long subsection of an epic or longer poem8
3166972686Free VerseA poem without a set structure of rhythm or rhyme9
3166974370Blank VerseAn unrhymed poem in iambic pentameter10
3166975922BalladA poem that tells a story about a specific event (also called a Narrative. Typically passed down orally)11
3166979948DirgeA brief hymn of lamentation or grief12
3166981058ElegyA poem that laments the dead, but usually ends in consolation13
3166982545Epic PoemA long poem concerning the journey of a hero14
3166984845EpigramA pithy, witty poem15
3166984846EpistleA poem in the form of a letter. It usually addresses someone close to the writer16
3166987915Lyric PoemA short poem that was originally meant for music17
3166989460OdeA long poem about a stately or serious subject18
3166991435Pastoral or BucolicA poem that depicts a rural scene19
3166993449SonnetA poem of fourteen lines in iambic pentameter20
3166996355Shakespearean/Elizabethan SonnetRhyme of ABABCDCDEFEFGG and divided into three quatrains and a couplet21
3166999570Italian or Petrarchan SonnetRhyme of ABBAABBACDCDCD or ABBAABBACDECDE and divided by an octave and sestet22
3167004718VillanelleA poem of 19-lines in which the first and third line alternately repeat throughout. It is typically divided into five tercets and one quatrain23
3167008141Stress/AccentThe emphasis given to certain sounds -- usually long vowels or words with high pitch24
3167012283ScansionMarking the stresses in a line of poetry25
3167013401RhymeWords that have similar sounds26
3167015287End RhymeRhyme that occurs at the end of lines of poetry "Cause even our birthdays is cursed days/A born thug in the first place, the worst ways"27
3167020007Internal RhymeRhyme that occurs inside a line of poetry "While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,/As someone gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door"28
3167025751Real RhymeRhyme that is exact "Now ain't nobody tell us it was fair/No love from my daddy 'cause the coward wasn't there"29
3167030204Half or Slant RhymeRhyme that is not exact, but implied "They say I'm wrong and I'm heartless, but all along/I was lookin' for a father he was gone"30
3167034537Feminine RhymeA multi-syllable rhyme that ends in an unstressed syllable "Think'st thou to seduce me then with words that have no meaning?"31
3167038259Masculine RhymeA rhyme that ends in a stressed syllable "I died and came back/I hustle these lyrics as if it's a game of crack"32
3167041713Rhyme SchemeThe pattern of a rhyme. ABBA or ABAB or ABCAB, etc33
3167043625AlliterationThe repetition of sounds at the beginning of a word "suspended from school and scared to go home, I was a fool/With the big boys breaking all the rules"34
3167048409ConsonanceRepetition of consonant sounds usually withing the words "As quietness distilled/As Twilight long begun"35
3167052274AssonanceRepetition of vowel sounds within the words "Men sell wedding bells"36
3167054177CaesureA natural pause in the middle of a line "Now Brenda's gotta make her own way can't go to her family" (notice the pause between way and can't)37
3167059885EnjambmentThe continuation of an idea between lines that is read like prose "She tried to hide per pregnancy/From her family who really didn't care see"38
3167066727PunctuationHow the poet uses commas, periods, semicolons, etc to make pauses in sound "We used to be like distant cousins, fightin' playin' dozens" or "So I gotta stay paid no doubt. Day in and day out."39

AP Literature Exam Vocab Flashcards

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3404406746abjureto renounce, repudiate or retract, especially with formal solemnity, recant to renounce or give up under oath, forswear0
3404406747abrogateto abolish by formal or official means, repeal1
3404406748abutto be adjacent; touch or join at the edge or border2
3404406749acolytean alter attendant in public worship; any attendant, assistant or follower3
3404408879acumenkeen insight, shrewdness4
3404408880adumbrateto produce a faint image or resemblance of; to outline or sketch to foreshadow to darken or conceal partially5
3404408881anachronismsomething/someone that is not in its correct historical or chronological time, especially a thing of person that belongs to an earlier time6
3404410715antediluvianvery old, old-fashioned, or out of date, antiquated, primitive7
3404410716apothegma short, pithy, instructive saying; a terse remark or aphorism8
3404410942appositesuitable, well-adapted, pertinent, relevant, apt9
3404412492approbationapproval, commendation official approval or sanction10
3404412493archetypeoriginal pattern or model from which all things of the same kind are copied or on which they are based; a model or first form, a prototype11
3404412494archaicmarked by characteristics of an earlier period, antiquated12
3404413732ascetisa person who dedicated his/her life to a pursuit of contemplative ideals or self-mortification for religious reasons a person who leads a simple life, especially one who abstains from normal pleasures13
3404413758aspersiona damaging or derogatory remark or criticism, slander14
3404501391badinagelight, playful banter15
3404501392beatificbestowing bliss, blessings or happiness16
3404501393beneficentdoing good or causing good to be done, kindly in action or purpose17
3404501417benightedintellectually or morally ignorant, unenlightented18
3404503344bibulousfound of drinks (alcoholic)19
3404503345bivouacmilitary encampment made with tents or improvised shelters, usually without shelter or protection from enemy fire20
3404503346canarda false or baseless, usually derogatory story, report or rumor21
3404504872charlatana person who pretends or claims to have more knowledge or skill than he/she does22
3404504873chastento restrain, subdue to inflict suffering upon for purposes of moral improvement23
3404504874chicanerytrickery or deception by quibbling or sophistry a quibble or subterfuge used to trick, deceive or evade24
3404506350coalesceto grow together or into one body to unit so as to form one mass25
3404506351cognitiveof or relating to the mental processes of perception, memory, judgement and reasoning26
3404506352confrerea fellow member of a profession, etc; colleague27
3404508248consanguinityrelationship by descent from a common ancestor; kinship28
3404510605contentioustending to argument or strife, quarrelsome29
3404510606covertconcealed, secret, disguised30
3404510607decryto criticize openly31
3404510608descryto discern or make out; catch sight of; to detect; to teach the sight of.32
3404512380demagoguea leader or rabble-rouser, usually appealing to emotion or prejudice33
3404512381denizenan inhabitant, resident; one who frequents a place34
3404512382desuetudestate of disuse; uselessness35
3404515150dilettantesomeone with an amateurish and superficial interest in a topic36
3404515151egregiousconspicuous, standing out from the mass (used particularly in an unfavorable sense)37
3404515152empiricalbased on observation or experiment38
3404517585encomiumwarm, glowing praise, esp. a formal expression of praise39
3404517586endemicnative or confined to a particular region or people; characteristic of or prevalent in a field40
3404517587enervateto reduce in strength41
3404517588erstwhileformer; of an earlier time42
3404519826eschewto shun; to avoid (as something wrong or distasteful)43
3404519827exulpateto free from guilt or blame44
3404519828exigenciesurgent situations, pressing needs45
3404521994exhumedig out of the ground; remove from a grave46
3404521995fecundfertile; fruitful; productive47
3404521996foiblea minor weakness in character48
3404523486germanerelevant, appropriate, apropos, fitting49
3404523487jocosejoking; humorous50
3404523488jocularplayful; humorous51
3404524989immureto enclose, usually in wall52
3404525294inchoateIn an initial stage; not fully formed53
3404526914indigentneedy, impoverished54
3404526915infinitesimalso small as to be almost immeasurable; minute55
3404526916insidiousintended to deceive or entrap; sly, treacherous56
3404529181interloperone who interferes with the affairs of others; a meddler57
3404529182internecinepertaining to conflict within a group; mutually destructive58
3404530767invidiousenvious, obnoxious, or offensive, likely to promote ill-will59
3404530768invoketo call on for support60
3404530769lachrymosetearful; sad61
3404532214lassitudea state of diminished energy62
3404532215laudableworthy of praise; commendable63
3404532216mawkishexcessively and objectionably sentimental; having a mildly sickening flavor64
3404532249milieuenvironment; surroundings65
3404534286misapprehendto misunderstand, fail to know66
3404534287misconstrueto interpret wrongly, mistake the meaning of67
3404534288narcissismself-love68
3404536447nugatoryof minor significance; futile69
3404536448nefariouswicked, depraved, devoid of moral standards70
3404536449nihilismthe belief that there are no values or morals in the universe71
3404538358nonpluspuzzled, not knowing what to do, at a loss72
3404538359obduratehardened in feeling; resistant to persuasion73
3404538360obloquycensure, blame, or abusive language aimed at a person or thing, especially by numerous persons or by the general public; disgrace or discredit from public blame.74
3404538407obviateto prevent; to make unnecessary75
3404540598paeansong of joy or triumph; a fervent expression of joy76
3404540599palliativerelieving or soothing the symptoms of a disease or disorder without effecting a cure77
3404540600paragonmodel of excellence or perfection78
3404540730parochialrestricted; limited; narrow; local79
3404542184perennialrecurrent through the year or many years; happening repeatedly80
3404542185peripateticwandering from place to place, especially on foot81
3404544126precursorsomething that comes before, esp. something that also announces or suggests something on its way82
3404544127primeavalancient83
3404544128polemiccontroversy; argument; verbal attack84
3404545862prodigallavish; wasteful85
3404545863progenitora direct ancestor86
3404545864prototypean original model on which later versions are patterned87
3404547135putativegenerally regarded as such; reputed; hypothesized, inferred88
3404549933quintessencethe purest essence or form of something; the most typical example89
3404549934ramificationa development or consequence resulting from a course of action90
3404549935recalcitrantstubbornly disobedient, resisting authority91
3404551759recoursea person or thing turned to for help or advice; the act of seeking help or protection92
3404551760rectitudemoral uprightness93
3404551761repleteabundantly supplied; complete94
3404553315risiblepertaining to laughter; able or inclined to laugh; laughable95
3404553316sanguineruddy; cheerfully optimistic96
3404554803sanguinarybloodthirsty; bloody97
3404554804sartorialof or pertaining to a tailor or his work; having to do with clothes or dress (especially men's)98
3404554805savanta person of extensive learning; an eminent scholar99
3404556234sedulouspersistent, showing industry and determination100
3404556235svelteslender and graceful101
3404556236torporextreme mental and physical sluggishness102
3404557746tyrobeginner; novice103
3404557747sycophanta flatterer; one who fawns on others in order to gain favor104
3404559354vacuouslacking in ideas or intelligence; empty; purposeless; idle.105
3404559355valedictorya farewell speech106
3404561621variegatedvaried; marked with different colors107
3404561622verisimilitudethe appearance of being true or real108
3404562990veritableactual, true, real109
3404564689vitiateto impair the quality of, corrupt morally110

AP Literature Terms #3 Flashcards

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3466249214inference/inferto draw a reasonable conclusion from given evidence.0
3466253808invectiveemotionally violent, or abusive language.1
3466261575ironythe contrast of what is specifically stated and what is meant2
3466262178loose sentencea type of sentence in which the independent clause comes first, followed by dependent grammatical units such as phrases and clauses.3
3466269133metaphorthe implied comparison of seemingly unlike things, or substituting one for the other.4
3466275868metonymya figure of speech in which one object is substituted for that of another closely associated with is5
3466277216moodan element that evokes certain emotions in the reader through words or descriptions6
3466280111narrativethe telling of a story or a series of events7
3466282221onomatopoeianatural sounds that are imitated through words8
3466286297oxymoronwhen two very different words or phrases are placed together to create a paradox ex) jumbo shrimp9
3466288550paradoxa statement that seems to be self-contradictory or opposed to common sense.10
3466291023parallelismrefers to the rhetorical framing of words, phrases, sentences or paragraphs to give structural similarity11

AP Literature Terms (Midterm) Flashcards

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3681473630Adventure novelA novel where exciting events predominate over characterization and sometimes theme0
3681473631AllegoryA form of extended metaphor in which objects and persons in a narrative, either in prose or verse, are equated with meanings that lie outside the narrative itself.1
3681473632AlliterationThe recurrence of initial consonant sounds.2
3681473633AllusionA causal and brief reference to a famous historical or literary figure or event3
3681473634AnadiplosisA rhetorical trope formed by repeating the last word of one phrase, clause, or sentence at or very near the beginning of the next.4
3681473635AnalogyThe comparison of two things, which are alike in several respects, for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object by showing how the idea or object is similar to some familiar one.5
3681473636AnaphoraThe repetition of the same word or words at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, or sentences, commonly in conjunction with climax and with parallelism.6
3681473637AntimetaboleReversal of the order of repeated words or phrases (a loosely chiastic structure, AB-BA) to intensify the final formulation, to present alternatives, or to show contrast.7
3681473638AntithesisEstablishing a clear, contrasting relationship between two ideas by joining them together or juxtaposing them, often in parallel structure.8
3681473639ApostropheThe direct address of a person or personified thing, either present or absent. Its most common purpose in prose is to give vent to or display intense emotion, which can no longer be held back.9
3681473640AssonanceThe use of similar vowel sounds repeated in successive or proximate words containing different consonants10
3681473641Blank VerseUnrhymed iambic pentameter.11
3681473642BurlesqueA work designed to ridicule a style, literary form, or subject matter either by treating the exalted in a trivial way or by discussing the trivial in exalted terms (that is, with mock dignity).12
3681473643CaesuraA pause, metrical or rhetorical, occurring somewhere in a line of poetry. The pause may or may not be typographically indicated.13
3681473644CanonIn relation to literature, this term is half-seriously applied to those works generally accepted as the great ones.14
3681473645ChiasmusA crossing parallelism, where the second part of a grammatical construction is balanced or paralleled by the first part, only in reverse order. Instead of an A,B structure (e.g., "learned unwillingly") paralleled by another A,B structure ("forgotten gladly"), the A,B will be followed by B,A ("gladly forgotten").15
3681473646Coming of age storyA type of novel where the protagonist is initiated into adulthood through knowledge, experience, or both, often by a process of disillusionment. Understanding comes after the dropping of preconceptions, a destruction of a false sense of security, or in some way the loss of innocence.16
3681473647ConceitAn elaborate, usually intellectually ingenious poetic comparison or image, such as an analogy or metaphor in which, say a beloved is compared to a ship, planet, etc. The comparison may be brief or extended.17
3681473648DiacopeRepetition of a word or phrase after an intervening word or phrase18
3681473649End-stoppedA line that has a natural pause at the end (period, comma, etc.)19
3681473650EnjambedThe running over of a sentence or thought into the next couplet or line without a pause at the end of the line; a run-on line.20
3681473651EpistropheThe repetition of the same word or words at the end of successive phrases, clauses or sentences.21
3681473652EpithetAn adjective or adjective phrase appropriately qualifying a subject (noun) by naming a key or important characteristic of the subject, as in "laughing happiness," "sneering contempt," "untroubled sleep," "peaceful dawn," and "life-giving water."22
3681473653Transferred EpithetAn adjective modifying a noun which it cannot logically modify, yet which works because the metaphorical meaning remains clear.23
3681473654EpizeuxisThe repetition of a word (for emphasis)24
3681473655EuphemismThe substitution of a mild or less negative word or phrase for a harsh or blunt one, as in the use of "pass away" instead of "die."25
3681473656FlashbackA device that allows the writer to present events that happened before the time of the current narration or the current events in the fiction.26
3681473657FootThe basic unit of meter consisting of a group of two or three syllables.27
3681473658FrameA narrative structure that provides a setting and exposition for the main narrative in a novel. Often, a narrator will describe where he found the manuscript of the novel or where he heard someone tell the story he is about to relate.28
3681473659Free VerseVerse that has neither regular rhyme nor regular meter, often uses cadences rather than uniform metrical feet.29
3681473660Heroic CoupletTwo lines of rhyming iambic pentameter.30
3681473661HumanismThe new emphasis in the Renaissance on human culture, education and reason, sparked by a revival of interest in classical Greek and Roman literature, culture, and language.31
3681473662HumoursIn medieval physiology, four liquids in the human body affecting behavior. Each humour was associated with one of the four elements of nature. In a balanced personality, no humour predominated. When a humour did predominate, it caused a particular personality.32
3681473663HyperboleExaggeration used for emphasis.33
3681473664InvectiveSpeech or writing that abuses, denounces, or vituperates against. It can be directed against a person, cause, idea, or system. It employs a heavy use of negative emotive language.34
3681473665IronyA mode of expression, through words or events, conveying a reality different from and usually opposite to appearance or expectation.35
3681473666Juvenalian SatireHarsher, more pointed, perhaps intolerant satire typified by the writings of Juvenal, often attacks particular people, sometimes thinly disguised as fictional characters.36
3681473667LampoonA crude, coarse, often bitter satire ridiculing the personal appearance or character of a person.37
3681473668Literary QualityA judgment about the value of a novel as literature. At the heart of this issue is the question of what distinguishes a great or important novel from one that is less important.38
3681473669MetaphorA comparison which imaginatively identifies one thing with another dissimilar thing, and transfers or ascribes to the first thing (the tenor or idea) some of the qualities of the second (the vehicle or image), asserts that one thing is another thing, not just that one is like another.39
3681473670Metaphysical PoetryA style of 17th Century poetry first by John Dryden and later by Dr. Samuel Johnson because of the highly intellectual and often abstruse imagery involved.40
3681473671MeterThe rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular sequence; established by the regular or almost regular recurrence of similar accent patterns (called feet)41
3681473672MetonymyAnother form of metaphor, very similar to synecdoche (and, in fact, some rhetoricians do not distinguish between the two), in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind.42
3681473673Mock EpicTreating a frivolous or minor subject seriously, especially by using the machinery and devices of the epic (invocations, descriptions of armor, battles, extended similes, etc.). The opposite of travesty.43
3681473674NovelAn extended prose fiction narrative of 50,000 words or more, broadly realistic--concerning the everyday events of ordinary people--and concerned with character.44
3681473675NovellaA prose fiction longer than a short story but shorter than a novel.45
3681473676Novel of MannersA novel focusing on and describing in detail the social customs and habits of a particular social group. Usually these conventions function as shaping or even stifling controls over the behavior of the characters.46
3681473677OnomatopoeiaThe use of words which in their pronunciation suggest their meaning (hiss, crunch, etc.)47
3681473678OxymoronA paradox reduced to two words, usually in an adjective-noun ("eloquent silence") or adverb-adjective ("inertly strong") relationship, and is used for effect, to emphasize contrasts, incongruities, hypocrisy, or simply the complex nature of reality.48
3681473679ParodyA satiric imitation of a work or of an author with the idea of ridiculing the author, his ideas, or work.49
3681473680PersonaThe person created by the author to tell a story.50
3681473681PersonificationThe metaphorical representation of an animal or inanimate object as having human attributes--attributes of form, character, feelings, behavior, and so on.51
3681473682Petrarchan ConceitThe kind of conceit used by Italian Renaissance poet Petrarch and popular in Renaissance English sonnets. (eyes like stars or the sun, hair like golden wires, lips like cherries, etc)52
3681473683Picaresque NovelAn episodic, often autobiographical novel about a rogue or picaro (a person of low social degree) wandering around and living off his wits. The wandering hero provides the author with the opportunity to connect widely different pieces of plot, since the hero can wander into any situation.53
3681473684PseudonymA "false name" or alias used by a writer desiring not to use his or her real name54
3681473685Pulp FictionNovels written for the mass market, intended to be "a good read,"--often exciting, titillating, thrilling.55
3681473686Regional NovelA novel faithful to a particular geographic region and its people, including behavior, customs, speech, and history.56
3681473687RhymeThe similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines.57
3681473688RidiculeWords intended to belittle a person or idea and arouse contemptuous laughter. The goal is to condemn or criticize by making the thing, idea, or person seem laughable and ridiculous. It is one of the most powerful methods of criticism.58
3681473689Roman a clefFrench for "novel with a key," a novel in which historical events and actual people are written about under the disguise of fiction.59
3681473690RomanceAn extended fictional prose narrative about improbable events involving characters that are quite different from ordinary people. Ex. knights on a quest for a magic sword and aided by characters like fairies and trolls60
3681473691SarcasmA form of verbal irony, expressing sneering, personal disapproval in the guise of praise.61
3681473692SatireA manner of writing that mixes a critical attitude with wit and humor in an effort to improve mankind and human institutions. Ridicule, irony, exaggeration, and several other techniques are almost always present.62
3681473693SequelA novel incorporating the same characters and often the same setting as a previous novel.63
3681473694SettingThe environment in which the action of a fictional work takes place.64
3681473695SimileA direct, expressed comparison between two things essentially unlike each other, but resembling each other in at least one way.65
3681473696SonnetA fourteen line poem, usually in iambic pentameter, with a varied rhyme scheme.66
3681473697Spenserian StanzaA nine-line stanza, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter and the last line in iambic hexameter. The rhyme scheme is A-B-A-B B-C-B-C C.67
3681473698StyleThe manner of expression of a particular writer, produced by choice of words, grammatical structures, use of literary devices, and all the possible parts of language use.68
3681473699SubplotA subordinate or minor collection of events in a novel or drama.69
3681473700SymbolSomething that is itself and yet also represents something else, like an idea.70
3681473701SynecdocheA form of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, the genus for the species, the species for the genus, the material for the thing made, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole thing itself (or vice versa).71
3681473702ToneThe writer's attitude toward his readers and his subject; his mood or moral view.72
3681473703TravestyA work that treats a serious subject frivolously-- ridiculing the dignified. Often the tone is mock serious and heavy handed.73
3681473704UnderstatementExpressing an idea with less emphasis or in a lesser degree than is the actual case. The opposite of hyperbole.74
3681473705VerisimilitudeThe semblance to truth or actuality in characters or events that a novel or other fictional work possesses.75
3681473706VersificationGenerally, the structural form of a verse, as revealed by scansion. Identification of verse structure includes the name of the metrical type and the name designating number of feet76
3681473707ZeugmaAny of several similar rhetorical devices, all involving a grammatically correct linkage (or yoking together) of two or more parts of speech by another part of speech.77

AP World History Chapter 25 Review Flashcards

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5992257182UlamaBody of Muslim scholars recognized as having specialist knowledge of Islamic sacred law and theology.0
5992257183TanzimatPeriod of reformation that began in 1839 and ended with the First Constitutional Era in 1876.1
5992257184FezFlat-topped conical red hat with a black tassel on top, worn by men in some Muslim countries.2
5992257185Percussion CapsSmall amount of explosive powder contained in metal or paper and exploded by striking.3
5992257186Breech-Loading RiflesFirearm in which the cartridge or shell is inserted or loaded into a chamber integral to the rear portion of a barrel.4
5992257187ExtraterritorialityState of being exempted from the jurisdiction of local law, usually as the result of diplomatic negotiations.5
5992257188"Young Turks"Member of a revolutionary party in the Ottoman Empire.6
5992257189BannermenSpecific word for someone who has sworn fealty to a specific house.7
5992257190Treaty PortsPort bound by treaty to be open to foreign trade, especially in 19th- and early-20th-century China and Japan.8
5992257191Most-Favored Nation StatusLevel of status given to one country by another and enforced by the World Trade Organization.9
5992257192"Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace"Massive rebellion in China that lasted from 1850 to 1864.10
5992257194Sultan Selim IIIReform-minded Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.11
5992257195JanissariesMember of the Turkish infantry forming the Sultan's guard between the 14th and 19th centuries.12
5992257196Mahmud II30th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1808 until his death in 1839.13
5992257197Hong XiuquanHakka Chinese leader of the Taiping Rebellion against the Qing Dynasty.14
5992257198CixiThe dowager empress of China who was hostile to foreign influences in China and supported the Boxer Rebellion.15
5992257199SerbiaRepublic in Southeast Europe.16
5992257200Crimean WarMilitary conflict in which the Russian Empire lost to an alliance of France, Britain, the Ottoman Empire, and Sardinia.17
5992257201White Lotus RebellionRebellion initiated by followers of the White Lotus movement during the Qing dynasty of China.18
5992257202The Opium War (18391842) - War between Great Britain and China that began as a conflict over the opium trade.19
5992257203Taiping RebellionMassive rebellion or civil war in China.20
5992257204Arrow WarName of a vessel which became the starting point of the conflict.21
5992257205Treaty of NankingPeace treaty which ended the First Opium War between the United Kingdom and the Qing dynasty of China on 29 August 184222
5992257206How did Selim III deal with Janissaries?At the end of the eighteenth century Sultan Selim III introduced reforms to strengthen the military and the central government and to standardize taxation and land tenure. These reforms aroused the opposition of Janissaries, noblemen, and the ulama.Tension between the Sultanate and the Janissaries sparked a Janissary revolt in Serbia in1805. Serbian peasants helped to defeat the Janissary uprising and went on to make Serbia independent of the Ottoman.23
5992257207Why did the Europeans aid the Greeks in gaining their independence from the Ottoman Empire?Its fall to the Muslims added to a new wave of support for the Greeks across Europe, with the idea that Greece had to be saved for European civilization.Already, financiers in London had contracted loans for the Greeks. The Greek Effort was helped by the arrival of money and volunteers from abroad, bringing the complaint from the Turks that they were "no longer fighting the Greeks but all Europe."24
5992257208How did Mahmud II deal with the Janissaries?Mahmud used popular outrage over the loss of Greece to justify a series of reforms that included the creation of a new army corps, elimination of the Janissaries, and reduction of the political power of the religious elite. Mahmud's Secularizing reform program was further articulated in the Tanzimat (restructuring) reforms initiated by his successor Abdul Mejid in 1839.25
5992257209List ten reforms of the Tanzimat and Abdul Mejid and their successors. Consult pages 678 and 679.1. Equal protection no matter religion 2. Equalized army conscription 3. New tax collection method 4. Establishing of consultative bodies 5. Codification of law 6. The Chamber of Deputies was formed 7. French preferred language 8. Officers sent to France to train 9. Imperial school of military science 10. Instructors imported from western Europe26
5992257212What were the causes, results and the consequences of the Opium War (1838 - 1842)?- Causes: British officials frustrated with trade deficit, opium brought in large revenue, Qing legalize opium, smuggling of opium began, Qing official and British rep reached stalemate - Results: Britain's navy surpassed china's, China decided to negotiate at Ming Capital - Consequences: Treaty of Nanking27

AP Literature Literary Terms Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
3061404813lyricsubjective, reflective poetry with regular rhyme scheme and meter which reveals the poet's thoughts and feelings to create a single, unique impression.0
3061404814narrativenondramatic, objective verse with regular rhyme scheme and meter which relates a story or narrative.1
3061404815sonneta highly formal and rigid14-line lyric verse form, with variable structure and rhyme scheme according to type. It usually occurs in iambic pentameter, and is written about one important subject (often love).2
3061404816English (Shakespearean)Sonnet with three quatrains and concluding couplet in iambic pentameter, rhyming abab, cdcd, efef, gg or abba, cddc, effe, gg. The Spenserian sonnet is a specialized form with linking rhyme abab, bcbc, cdcd, ee.3
3061404817Italian (Petrarchan)Sonnet with an octave and sestet, between which a break in thought occurs. The traditional rhyme scheme is abba, abba, cde, cde (or, in the sestet, any variation of c, d, e).4
3061404818odeelaborate lyric verse which deals seriously with a dignified theme.5
3061404819blank verseunrhymed lines of iambic pentameter.6
3061404820free verseunrhymed lines without regular rhythm.7
3061404821epica long, dignified narrative poem which gives the account of a hero important to his nation or race.8
3061404822dramatic monologuea lyric poem in which the speaker tells an audience about a dramatic moment in her life and, in doing so, reveals her character.9
3061404823elegya poem of lament, meditating on the death of an individual.10
3061404824balladsimple, narrative verse which tells a story to be sung or recited; the folk ________ is anonymously handed down, while the literary ______ has a single author.11
3061404825idylllyric poetry describing the life of the shepherd in pastoral, bucolic, idealistic terms.12
3061404826villanellea French verse form, strictly calculated to appear simple and spontaneous; five tercets and a final quatrain, rhyming aba, aba, aba, aba, aba, abaa. Lines 1, 6, 12, 18 and 3, 9, 15, 19 are refrain.13
3061404827light versea general category of poetry written to entertain, such as lyric poetry, epigrams, and limericks. It can also have a serious side, as in parody or satire.14
3061404828haikuJapanese verse in three lines of five, seven, and five syllables, often depicting a delicate image.15
3061404829limerickhumorous nonsense-verse in five anapestic lines rhyming aabba; a-lines being trimeter and b-lines being dimeter.16
3061404830meterpoetry's rhythm, or its pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. ______ is measured in units of feet.17
3061404831scansionthe analysis of the mechanical elements within a poem to determine meter. Feet are marked off with slashes ( / ) and accented appropriately as stressed or unstressed.18
3061404832caesuraa pause in the meter or rhythm of a line.19
3061404833enjambmenta run-on line, continuing into the next without a grammatical break.20
3061404834rimeold spelling of rhyme, which is the repetition of like sounds at regular intervals, employed in versification, the writing of verse.21
3061404835versificationthe writing of verse.22
3061404836end rhymerhyme occurring at the ends of verse lines; most common rhyme form.23
3061404837internal rhymerhyme contained within a line of verse.24
3061404838rhyme schemepattern of rhymes within a unit of verse; in analysis, each end rhyme-sound is represented by a letter (abab etc.)25
3061404839masculine rhymerhyme in which only the last, accented syllable of the rhyming words correspond exactly in sound; most common kind of end rhyme (night/skies/bright/eyes).26
3061404840feminine rhymerhyme in which two consecutive syllables of the rhyming words correspond, the first syllable carrying the accent; double rhyme (flying/dying).27
3061404841half rhyme (slant rhyme)imperfect, approximate rhyme (sun/sea/scud/beaks).28
3061404842assonancerepetition of two or more vowel sounds within a line.29
3061404843consonancerepetition of two or more consonant sounds within a line.30
3061404844alliterationrepetition of one or more initial sounds, usually consonants, in words within a line.31
3061404845onomatopoeiathe use of a word whose sound suggests it meaning.32
3061404846euphonythe use of compatible, harmonious sounds to produce a pleasing, melodious effect.33
3061404847cacophonythe use of inharmonious sounds in close conjunction for effect; the opposite of euphony.34
3061404848metaphora figure of speech which makes a direct comparison of two unlike objects by identification or substitution.35
3061404849similea direct comparison of two unlike objects, using like or as.36
3061404850conceitan extended metaphor comparing two unlike objects with powerful effect. (It owes its roots to elaborate analogies in Petrarch and to the Metaphysical poets, particularly Donne.)37
3061404851personificationa figure of speech in which objects and animals have human qualities.38
3061404852apostrophean address to a person or personified object not present.39
3061404853metonymythe substitution of a word which relates to the object or person to be named, in place of the name itself.40
3061404854synecdochea figure of speech in which a part represents the whole object or idea.41
3061404855hyperboleexaggeration for effect; overstatement.42
3061404856litotesa form of understatement in which the negative of an antonym is used to achieve emphasis and intensity.43
3061404857ironythe contrast between actual meaning and the suggestion of another meaning:44
3061404858symbolismthe use of one object to suggest another.45
3061404859imagerythe use of words to represent things, actions, or ideas by sensory description.46
3061404860paradoxa statement which appears self-contradictory, but underlines a basis of truth.47
3061404861oxymoroncontradictory terms brought together to express a paradox for strong effect.48
3061404862allusiona reference to an outside fact, event, or other source.49
3061404863tonethe author's attitude toward her audience and subject.50
3061404864themethe author's major idea or meaning.51
3061404865dramatic situationthe circumstance of the speaker.52
3061404866stanzaa section of a poem53
3061404867aubadea song written to praise the coming of dawn.54
3061404868ballada simple poem, usually created for singing, dealing with a dramatic episode.55
3061404869balladea French poem of three stanzas and an envoy, a four-line refrain recited to another person.56
3061404870dirgea poem or song of lament, usually a commemoration for the dead.57
3061404871ecloguea bucolic or pastoral poem such as Spenser's Shepheardes Calendar.58
3061404872epithalamiona poem written in celebration of marriage.59
3061404873hymna poem of religious emotion usually written for singing.60
3061404874monodya poem similar to a dirge; a Greek poem of mourning sung by one person.61
3061404875pastoralmany forms of literature fit this category; its setting is a created world marked by constant summer and fecund nature.62
3061404876rondeaua French poem for light topics; it has 15 lines, with short refrains at lines 9 and 15, rhymed aabba, aabc, aabbac.63
3061404877rondela poem very similar to a rondeau, with 13 or 14 lines.64
3061404878songa poem for musical expression, usually brief, straightforward, and emotional.65
3061404879threnodya poem similar to a dirge; in Greek poetry it mourns the dead and is sung by a chorus.66
3061404880vers de sociétélight verse, written in a congenial, witty, amorous way.67
3061404881lyric poemThe _____ is the most widely used type of poem, so diverse in its format that a rigid definition is impossible. However, several qualities are common to all _____=1. limited in length 2. intensely subjective3. personal expressions of personal emotion 4. expresses thoughts and feelings of a single speaker 5. highly imaginative 6. has a regular rhyme scheme68
3061404882narrative poemThe __________ tells a story, sometimes simple, sometimes complicated, sometimes brief, sometimes long (as in the epic). Because of the increasing acceptance of the novel and shorter forms of prose fiction, _______ appears less frequently today. Almost the opposite of the lyric, it can be characterized as follows=1. highly objective 2. told by a speaker detached from the action 3. the thoughts and feelings of the speaker do not enter the poem 4. the rhyme scheme is regular69
3061404883soliloquy(literally one-speech)--a sustained moment where one character speaks his private thoughts aloud. Other characters cannot hear him, but the audience can.70
3061404884asidea brief moment where one character speaks his private thoughts aloud while in the middle of a conversation with other characters. Other characters cannot hear him, but the audience can.71
3061404885odean exalted, complex, rapturous lyric poem written about a dignified, lofty subject.72
3061404886blank verseunrhymed verse, but each line is basically iambic pentameter. It is often used in plays, especially those of Shakespeare. The tone of ______ tends to be serious. Today, critics employ the term to include many unrhymed metric forms, where iambic pentameter occurs but not constantly.73
3061404887free verse (vers libre)it is free from the limitations of fixed meter and rhyme, but this is not to say that it lacks poetic techniques. _________ is very rhythmic, often patterned after the spoken word. (The American poet Walt Whitman is one of its great practitioners).74
3061404888dramatic monologueAnother form of the lyric, the dramatic monologue was brought to great heights by the Victorian poet Robert Browning. As the title suggests, it is a poem told by one speaker about a significant event. We enter the psyche of the speaker, and the skillful poet makes much of his own nature, attitudes and circumstances available in words to the reader who discerns the implications of the poem. The dramatic monologue differs from soliloquy in a play in that in drama time and place are developed before the character ascends the stage alone to make his remarks, whereas the dramatic monologue by itself establishes time, place and character. In the dramatic monologue, the speaker= 1. reveals in his own words some dramatic situation in which he is involved 2. demonstrates his character through the poem 3. addresses a listener who does not engage in dialogue but helps to develop the speech75
3061404889elegya poem that mourns the death of an individual, the absence of something deeply loved, or the transience of mankind. A form of the lyric, the poem has a solemn, dignified tone as it laments the loss of something dear to the poet or to man. A particular subset is the Pastoral Elegy, a mourning poem with a joyous ending. The format involves a shepherd set in a pastoral world, a rustic, fertile environment marked by eternal summer and a fecund nature.76
3061404890metric feetiambic= a light followed by a stressed syllable (balloon) trochaic= a stressed followed by a light syllable (soda) anapestic= two light followed by a stressed syllable (contradict) dactylic= a stressed followed by two light syllables (maniac) spondaic= two successive syllables with approximately equal strong stresses (man-made) pyrrhic= two successive syllables with approximately equal light stresses77
3061404891verse linesAspect of poetry measured as follows: monometer/one foot; dimeter/two feet; trimeter/three feet; tetrameter/four feet; pentameter/five feet hexameter/six feet (also called an Alexandrine); heptameter/seven feet (also called a fourteener); octometer/eight feet78
3061404892figurative languagewriting or speech not meant to be interpreted literally; it is language used to create vivid word pictures, to make writing emotionally intense and concentrated, and to state ideas in new and unusual ways79
3061404893flashbackinterruption of the narrative to show an episode that happened before that point in the story80
3061404894foreshadowinghint to the reader of what is to come81
3061404895mood (atmosphere)feeling created in the reader by the passage82
3061404896parableshort tale that teaches a lesson or illustrates a moral truth (The Pearl, "The Minister's Black Veil")83
3061404897point of viewthe vantage point from which a story is told; first-person- the story is told by a character within the story third-person- the story is told by a narrator outside the story limited - the storyteller knows the internal state of one character omniscient - the storyteller knows the internal states of all characters84
3061404898rhythmpattern of stressed or unstressed sounds in spoken or written language85
3061404899sentence structurevaried length and arrangement of words to produce a desired effect86
3061404900settingtime and place of action87
3061404901structureoverall design or arrangement of material88
3061404902stylemode of expression, the devices an author employs in his writing, the way the content is presented89
3061404903syntaxarrangement of words to show their mutual relations90
3061404904word choice (diction)particular choice of words for meaning and suggestion91
3061404905anaphorathe repetition of a word or short phrase for dramatic or rhetorical effect (ex: MLK's use of "I have a dream")92
3061404906anastropheInverted syntax, like how Yoda talks93
3061404907asyndetonthe omission or absence of a conjunction between parts of a sentnece94
3061404908zeugmaa figure of speech in which a word applies to two others in different senses or to two others of which it semantically suits only one (ex: Frank and his license expired last month [different ways of expiring])95

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