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AP Spanish Language and Culture Conversational Speaking Flashcards

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7172830059así queso therefore0
7172830060a verLet's see1
7172830061creo queI think that2
7172830062pienso queI think that3
7172830063entoncesthen4
7172830064buenowell5
7172830065y buenoand6
7172830066claroof course7
7172830067es obvio queIt's obvious that8
7172830068comprendoI understand9
7172830069creo que síI think so10
7172830070valeokay11
7172830071parece mentiraIt's hard to believe12
7172830072en otras palabrasIn other words13
7172830073por esoThat's why14
7172830074es queIt's that15
7172830075o seaI mean16
7172830076quisiera decir queI would like to say that17
7172830077¿Me entiendes?Do you understand me?18
7172830078¿Sabes?You know?19
7172830079¿Entiendes lo que quiero decir?Do you know what I mean?20
7172830080saludarto greet21
7172830081despedirsay good bye22
7172830082empezarto begin23
7172830083explicarto answer24
7172830084reaccionarto react25
7172830085averiguarto guess26
7172830086preguntarto ask a question27
7172830087detallesdetails28
7172830088continuarto continue29
7172830089animarto cheer up30
7172830090tratarto try31
7172830091contarto tell32
7172830092finalizarto finalize33
7172830093confirmarto confirm34
7172830094informarto inform35
7172830095una llamadacall36
7172830096negativamentenegatively37
7172830097aconsejarto advise38
7172830098contestarto answer39
7172830099pedirto ask40
7172830100sugerirto suggest41
7172830101ofrecerto offer42
7172830102darto give43
7172830103terminarto end44
7172830104una noticianews45
7172830105afirmativamentepositively46

AP Literature Vocabulary and Terms List 13 Flashcards

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6523610640insipidlacking vigor or interest. Many artists continued to churn out __________, shallow works.0
6523612417licentiousAdj. promiscuous and unprincipled in sexual matters. Maria could not believe the ___________ culture of the local nightclub.1
6523612418mutabilityN. liability or tendency to change. The incessant _____________ of species is attributed to global warming.2
6523612419parapetN. A low protective wall along the edge of a roof, bridge, or balcony. Mary leaned over the sandbags making up the ____________.3
6523615388physiognomyN. A person's facial features or expression, especially when regarded as indicative of character or ethnic origin. As Roger Chillingworth grew more vengeful, his_______________ changed.4
6523617560proprietaryAdj. Relating to an owner or ownership. The company has a _____________ right to the property.5
6523617561retinueN. A group of advisers, assistants, or others accompanying an important person. The president's ________________ advised him to give an apologetical speech.6
6523617562seditionN. Conduct or speech inciting people to rebel against the authority of a state or monarch. The peaceful march turned into ____________ that called for the president's impeachment.7
6523619745transcendentAdj. Surpassing the ordinary; exceptional. The conductor was described as a "________________ genius" for his amazing compositions.8
6523619746vehementAdv. In a forceful, passionate, or intense manner; with great feeling. He ______________ denied any suggestion of improper conduct.9
6523621369IMPLICATIONSomething that is implied or not explicitly stated. The ___________ that I had drank all of the soda was an unspoken truth.10
6523621370INTERLUDEA pause between acts of a play.11
6523621371IRONYa figure of speech in which words are used in such a way that their intended meaning is different from the actual meaning of the words KNOW THREE TYPES of this word12
6523623459MAXIMa short, pithy statement expressing a general truth or rule of conduct13
6523623460MOTIFN- a recurring and or unifying idea in a work of literature art14

AP Literature Comedy - genre Flashcards

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6018105272ComedyType of drama opposed to tragedy, emphasizes human limitation0
6018116276denotation and connotationliteral definition and emotional content1
6018123369ConsonanceThe repetition of consonant sounds2
6018136424coupleta stanza of two lines3
6018141329climaxevent in the plot where the conflict is most directly addressed4
6018150729Deus ex machinaResolution of a plot by use of a highly improbable chance or coincidence5
6018157806Dictionauthors choice of words6
6018160992Dramais designed to be performed7
6018168152drama of the absurdallied with comedy, radically non realistic in both content and presentation8
6018176598Editorializingdeparts from narrative or dramatic mode and instructs the reader how to think or fell about story or characters9
6018185900Expositionfirst section of the plot10
6018188754falling actionafter climax containing events caused by the climax and contributing to the resolution11
6018197825farcedrama related to comedy but emphasizing improbable situations, violent conflicts, physical action, and coarse wit over characterization or articulated plot12
6018208695Figurative languagesaying one thing and meaning something else13
6018214972Figure of speechstates something that is not literally true in order to create an effect14
6018222325flashbackreference to an event which took place prior too the beginning of a story or play15
6018230229Foilcharacter in a play who sets off the main character or other characters by comparison16
6018236113foreshadowingmethod to build suspense by providing hints of what is to come17
6018241172Free VerseRhymed poetry with lines of varying lengths, and containing no specific metrical pattern18
6018250088Genrea literary type or form19

AP Spanish Literature Terms Flashcards

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7164237477vanguardismorefers to people or works that are experimental or innovative, particularly in regard to art , the culture , the politics , philosophy and literature.0
7164237478surrealismoan artistic movement emerged in France from Dadaism , in the early 1920s , around the personality of the poet André Breton.1
7164237479postmodernismoPost-postmodernism is a term applied to a wide range of developments in critical theory , philosophy , architecture , art , the literature and culture emerging from and reacting to the postmodernism . Another recent similar term is metamodernism.2
7164237480neoclasicismoemerged in the eighteenth century to describe such negative movement aesthetic that came to be reflected in the arts , intellectual principles of the Enlightenment , since the mid- eighteenth century had been going on philosophy , and consequently had been transmitted to all areas of culture . However, coinciding with the decline of Napoleon Bonaparte , Neoclassicism was losing favor for the Romanticism .3
7164237481costumbrismothe literary or pictorial interpretation of local everyday life, mannerisms, and customs, primarily in the Hispanic scene, and particularly in the 19th century.4
7164237482culteranismoa stylistic movement of the Baroque period of Spanish history that is also commonly referred to as Gongorismo (after Luis de Góngora). It began in the late 16th century with the writing of Luis de Góngora and lasted through the 17th century.5
7164237483conceptismoa literary movement of the Baroque period of Portuguese and Spanish literature. It began in the late 16th century and lasted through the 17th century. Conceptismo is characterized by a rapid rhythm, directness, simple vocabulary, witty metaphors, and wordplay.6
7164237484retruécanoJuegos de palabras; inversión de los términos de una cláusula o proposición en otra subsiguiente para que esta última choque con la anterior.7
7164237485sinestesiaDescripción de una sensación o imagen por medio de sensaciones percibidas por distintos órganos sensoriales, por ejemplo, vista y olfato.8
7164237486sinécdoqueTipo de metáfora que usa una parte o cualidad de un objeto físico para representar todo el objeto.9
7164237487polisíndetonRepetición de conjunciones para alargar la frase o hacer más `solemne la expresión.10
7164237488paradojaContraposición de dos conceptos contradictorios que expresan una verdad.11
7164237489metonimiaUn tipo de metáfora en la que la imagen se asocia con lo representado, pero no es parte de ello; la metonimia hace que el destinatario del mensaje haga la asociación.12
7164237490epítetoPalabra o frase delante o después del nombre que sirve para caracterizar al personaje13
7164237491cacofoníaUso de palabras que combinan sonidos desagradables, ásperos y cortantes.14
7164237492asíndetonOmisión de conjunciones o palabras para suscitar viveza o energía.15
7164237493ironía dramáticaCircunstancia en la que el lector o espectador sabe algo desconocido por un personaje y sabe o sospecha lo que ocurrirá antes de que lo sepa el personaje.16
7164237494silvaPoema no estrófico que combina versos de siete y once sílabas, entrelazados por rima consonante y versos libres.17
7164237495narrador fidedignoNarrador digno de confianza, cuyo entendimiento de los personajes o las acciones del relato lo acredita para contar los hechos. Se ajusta a las normas que establece el autor implícito.18
7164237496leitmotivRepetición de una palabra, frase, situación o noción. Motivo recurrente en una obra.19
7164237497realismo mágicoMovimiento literario hispanoamericano surgido a mediados del siglo XX, caracterizado por la introducción de elementos fantásticos —sueños, superstición, mitos, magia— inmersos en una narrativa realista. Hay antecedentes importantes en los libros de caballería, como señalan algunos de los escritores de este movimiento.20
7164237498pícaroPersonaje de baja condición, astuto, ingenioso y de mal vivir que protagoniza la novela picaresca21
7164237499novela picarescaGénero literario narrativo en prosa de carácter pseudoautobiográfico muy característico de la literatura española. Nace como parodia de las novelas idealizadoras del Renacimiento y saca la sustancia moral, social y religiosa del contraste cotidiano entre dos estamentos, el de los nobles y el de los siervos. El protagonista, un pícaro de muy bajo rango social y descendiente de padres marginados o delincuentes, pretende mejorar su suerte y para ello recurre a la astucia y el engaño.22
7164237500naturalismoCorriente literaria de mediados del siglo XIX que retrata al ser humano y su circunstancia con una objetividad científica. El ser humano carece de libre albedrío; su existencia está determinada por la herencia genética y el medio en el que vive. En cuanto a temas, abundan los asuntos fuertes y las bajas pasiones.23
7164237501modernismoMovimiento literario hispanoamericano cuyo mayor exponente es Rubén Darío y que funde tres movimientos franceses: parnasianismo, simbolismo y romanticismo. Emplea una rica musicalidad verbal para expresar pasiones, visiones, ritmos y armonías internos.24
7164237502libro de caballeríasGénero literario en prosa muy popular en España a mediados del siglo XVI, que celebra las hazañas de los caballeros andantes y contrapone a la fiereza guerrera un masoquismo amoroso inspirado en el amor cortés.25
7164237503Generación del 98Grupo de novelistas, poetas, ensayistas y filósofos españoles, activos durante y después de la Guerra de Cuba (1898), que restauraron a España a una prominencia intelectual y literaria. Les era de gran importancia definir a España como una entidad cultural e histórica.26
7164237504Edad Media (medieval)Período comprendido entre los siglos V y XV. En España se considera que la se cierra con la llegada de Colón a tierras americanas.27
7164237505boomEn la literatura hispanoamericana, un momento de gran auge de la creación de obras narrativas que inicia en 1940. La producción es muy variada y muchos de sus autores crearon best sellers internacionales y traducidos a múltiples idiomas. Una de las tendencias de esta literatura se corresponde con la denominada literatura del realismo mágico.28
7164237506barrocoMovimiento cultural español (1580-1700) caracterizado por su complejidad y su extravagante ornamentación, cuyo propósito era asombrar e incitar introspección29
7164237507hipérbatonAlteración del orden normal sintáctico de las palabras en una oración.30
7164237508apóstrofeRecurso en que el hablante se dirige a personas presentes o ausentes, a seres animados o a objetos inanimados31
7164237509antítesisYuxtaposición de una palabra, frase o idea a otra de significación contraria32
7164237510anáforaRepetición de palabras en una sucesión de versos o enunciados.33
7164237511teatro del absurdoObra dramática basada en una situación sin sentido, en la que los personajes se enfrentan a situaciones que muestran la insensatez de la vida en un mundo deshumanizado.34
7164237512sonetoPoema de procedencia italiana que consiste en catorce versos endecasílabos repartidos en dos cuartetos y dos tercetos; el esquema más común es ABBA ABBA CDC DCD; otro es ABBA ABBA CDE CDE35

AP Literature Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8675750174AnaphoraThe repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of a clause0
8675754402Consonancethe repetition of a consonant sound within a series of words to produce a harmonious effect, e.g., And each slow dusk a drawing-down on blinds. The "d" sound is in consonance.1
8675759198SimileA comparison of two different things or ideas through the use of the words like or as.2
8675762683Metaphorcomparison without the use of like or as.3
8675770178Personificationis a kind of metaphor which gives inanimate objects or abstract ideas human characteristics4
8675783149Onomonopiathe use of words in which the sounds seem to resemble the sounds they describe, e.g., hiss, buzz, bang5
8675788453UnderstatementThe opposite of hyperbole. It is a kind of irony which deliberately represents something as much less than it really is,6
8675820186Paradoxa statement which contradicts itself. It may seem almost absurd.7
8675826983Hyperbolea deliberate, extravagant, and often outrageous exaggeration.8
8675843257Oxymorona form of paradox which combines a pair of contrary terms into a single expression. This combination usually serves the purpose of shocking the reader into awareness, e.g., sweet sorrow9
8675850845Ironythe result of a statement saying one thing while meaning the opposite. Its purpose is usually to criticize, e.g., It is simple to stop smoking. I've done it many times.10
8675853491Sarcasma type of irony in which a person appears to be praising something while he is actually insulting the thing. Its purpose is to injure or hurt, e.g., As I fell down the stairs headfirst, I heard her say "Look at that coordination."11
8675854710Antithesisinvolves a direct contrast of structurally parallel word groupings generally for the purpose of contrast, e.g., Sink or swim.12
8675855987ApostropheApostrophe is a form of personification in which the absent or dead are spoken to as if present, and the inanimate as if animate.13
8675857728Allusiona reference to a mythological, literary, historical, or Biblical person, place, or thing14
8675859596Synecdoche (Metonymy)is a form of metaphor. In synecdoche, a part of something is used to signify the whole,15

AP Language Flashcards

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5167276555Ferventhaving or showing great warmth or intensity of spirit, feeling, enthusiasm0
5167286747Resignedsubmissive or acquiescent1
5167292029Submissiveunresistingly or humbly obedient2
5167301424Acquiescentapt to consent or give in; acquiesce3
5167321352Surlyunfriendly or hostile; menacingly irritable4
5167340287Acerbicacid in temper, mood, or tone5
5167345520Affectationthe act of taking on or displaying an attitude not natural to oneself or not genuinely felt6
5167361766Alliterationthe repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighboring words7
5167378472Altruismunselfish regard for or devotion to the welfare of others8
5167385646Ambivalentsimultaneous and contradictory attitudes or feelings ( as attraction and repulsion) toward an object, person, or action9
5167398107Antithesisthe rhetorical contrast of ideas by means of parallel arrangement of words, phrases, clauses, or ideas10
5167414393Assertto state or declare positively and often forcefully or aggressively11
5167417994Berateto scold or condemn vehemently and at length12
5167422626Blatantnoisy especially in a vulgar or offensive way; obvious13
5167427938Brusquemarkedly short and abrupt14
5167430937Capriciousgoverned or characterized by impulse15
5167437549Churla rude, ill-bred person16
5167439722Colloquialused in and characterized by familiar and informal speech17
5167446210Combativemarked by eagerness to fight or contend18
5167452140Comprehensivecovering completely or broadly19
5167456364Compunctionanxiety arising from awareness of guilt20
5167460943Conciliatoryto gain (as good will) by pleasing acts21
5167468868Condescendingto descend to a less formal or dignified level22
5167472689Conspicuousobvious to the eye or mind23
5167475467Contemplativemarked by considering with study24

AP English Literature Mythological Allusions Flashcards

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7257313548AchillesBorn of mortal and Zeus; mother dipped him in the river Styx to give him immortality but neglected to include the heel she held him by. Eventually, during the Trojan War, he was shot in that spot and killed. An Achilles heel is the one vulnerable spot in an otherwise invulnerable thing or person.0
7257313549Adonisa mortal youth who was loved by Aphrodite for his great beauty and later killed by a wild boar.1
7257313550Aphrodite / Venusgoddess of love and beauty (and spring and bloom).2
7257313551Apollo / Solgod of the sun; patron of healing; drove a chariot that pulled the sun, so it rose and crossed the sky each day3
7257313552Arachnea mortal who was a great weaver and very proud (arrogant) of her ability. She challenged Athena to a weaving contest and won. Athena was mad and turned her into a spider, so she could weave and spin non-stop. This is where arachnids get their name. She is a symbol of the problems arrogance can cause.4
7257313553Ares / Marsgod of warfare5
7257313554Artemis / Dianasister of Apollo; drives a chariot that carries the moon; goddess of the hunt and patron of virgins. Seen as a huntress6
7257313555Athena / Minervagoddess of wisdom and warfare; was "born" full-grown and wearing armor, by springing from the head of Zeus. Her symbol is the owl. She was a great weaver and spinner; in charge of arts and crafts.7
7257313556Centaura race of beings half man (front) and half horse, known for fighting and lustiness (but sometimes for great wisdom!).8
7257313557Cerberusa three-headed watchdog who guards the entrance to Hades.9
7257313558ChaosChaos is the void which came into being before anything else. But some say that Chaos was born from Mist, and that Mist was the first to exist. Others affirm that Chaos is not a void, but a rough unordered mass of things. It is also asserted that Chaos existed from the beginning, together with Nyx, Erebus (Darkness of the Underworld), and Tartarus, and consequently they consider Chaos to be as Nyx and Erebus: one of "the powers below the ground." It is told that during the war between the TITANS and the OLYMPIANS, the fight came to such a degree of intensity that an amazing heat seized Chaos.10
7257313559Cronosthe wily, youngest and most terrible of the children of Uranus, whom he hated. He castrated his father and became ruler of the universe, but was later overthrown by his own son Zeus.11
7257313560Cyclopsa race of one-eyed giants of whom the most famous is Polyphemus, the son of Poseidon; he was blinded by Odysseus.12
7257313561Daedalus and IcarusDaedalus was an inventor (the Great Artificer) who killed a rival in jealousy and fled to Crete (from Greece) where King Minos gave him refuge and put him to work. The king's wife lusted after a gorgeous bull which had been given to Minos by Poseidon. She had Daedalus make her a wooden cow in which she hid herself in order to mate with the bull; she conceived and bore the Minotaur from this union. The furious Minos ordered the Minotaur imprisoned in a labyrinth, which he commissioned Daedalus to design. Eventually, Daedalus and his son, Icarus, were also imprisoned in the Labyrinth, from which they escaped when Daedalus built wings from wax and feathers. On their escape to Crete, Daedalus warned Icarus not to fly too high because the sun would melt the wax; but Icarus ignored his father, his wings melted, and he fell to his watery death. Daedalus escaped safely.13
7257313562Dionysus / Bacchusgod of wine and revelry. Wild feasts were held in his honor, which usually turned into drunken orgies, since that was what he was in charge of.14
7257313563Eros / Cupidgod of love; often pictured as a winged boy.15
7257313564Europaa princess whom Zeus abducted and raped, when he was in the form of a bull.16
7257313565Hades / Plutogod of the underworld (sort of like hell but not so awful); the place itself is called Hades. Also, god of wealth (gold and silver came from the earth, which he ruled.)17
7257313566Hephaestus / VulcanGod of fire; a blacksmith; the only god who is deformed - rejected son of Zeus and Hera.18
7257313567Herculesa son of Zeus and a mortal, he was famous for his great strength and endurance; he performed twelve amazing feats of strength, called the "labors of Hercules."19
7257313568Mercurythe messenger of the gods; wears shoes and hat with wings so he can fly very quickly. Known for living by his wits and cleverness.20
7257313569Midaswas given his wish that everything that he touched would turn to gold but re- thought this idea when he killed his daughter by touching her and was near starvation because all the food he touched turned to gold. He had the spell removed eventually.21
7257313570Minotaurmonster half man and half bull, wild and violent, demands sacrifices yearly of Greek youths and maidens. Imprisoned in the Labyrinth (see Daedalus). Eventually slain by Theseus with the help of the king's daughter, who gives him a ball of string so he can find his way out of the Labyrinth.22
7257313571Narcissus and EchoNarcissus was a gorgeous male who admired himself enormously. Echo loved him but he ignored her. Eventually, she was cursed with not being able to speak her own thoughts but only repeat what other said. This bothered Narcissus even more and he taunted her and she eventually wasted away so that just her voice, repeating others' words, remained. He became so enamored with himself that he got stuck peering into a pond, admiring his reflection, and became a flower that grows there.23
7257313572Nemesisthe goddess of retributive justice or vengeance.24
7257313573Odysseus / Ulysses(meaning "man of wrath" according to Homer, or more likely, from Greek "a guide; the one showing the way"), known as Ulysses in Roman mythology. Known for his guile and resourcefulness, he is the hero of Homer's Odyssey, and a major character in the Iliad. Odysseus was the son of Laertes and Anticlea, although some sources, prominent among them Iphigenia at Aulis by Euripides, state that Sisyphus was his father. As a child, Odysseus was wet-nursed by Euryclea. Odysseus was the king of Ithaca, husband of Penelope and father of Telemachus, favorite of Athena, and wiliest of the Greeks involved in the Trojan War. Odysseus earns this title by, among other things, masterminding the Trojan Horse. He is most famous for the ten years it took him to return home from the war, which is described in the Odyssey.25
7257313574Oedipusabandoned at birth by his parents, who were trying to avoid a horrible prophecy that he would kill his father and marry his mother. Raised in Corinth, he eventually fled when he heard the same prophecy. In the road, he met and killed his father, solved the riddle of the Sphinx, and then went to Thebes and married his mother, with whom he had three children. When he learned the truth, he blinded himself and went into exile.26
7257313575Pan / SatyrPan is one of the group of satyrs, which are half man and half goat, with goat's legs (including cloven hooves), a tail, pointy ears, and a wanton nature, who live in the woods. Pan is the god of forests, flocks, and shepherds. He usually plays pipes (a flute).27
7257313576Pandorathe first mortal woman, sent to Earth as a punishment to man for Prometheus's theft of fire. She brought with her a box containing all human ills, which escaped into the world when she opened the box. Only hope was left at the bottom.28
7257313577Parisson of the last king of Troy (Priam), he is forced to award a golden apple (inscribed "for the fairest") to either Aphrodite, who promises him the love of the most beautiful woman in the word; Hera, who offers him great wealth; or Athena, who offers him wisdom. He chooses Aphrodite, who helps him steal Helen, who's married to Menaleus of Sparta. He takes her to Troy and the Greeks come after and we have the Trojan War.29
7257313578Persephone and Demeter / CeresDemeter is the goddess of agriculture and fruitfulness (fertility): guardian of marriage. Persephone is her daughter whom Hades marries and takes to Hades to live. Demeter is so unhappy without her beloved daughter that nothing can grow. A compromise is reached and Persephone spends six months on Earth with Demeter and six months below, with Hades. This is the explanation for why we have seasons (winter is when Persephone is gone and Demeter is too unhappy to make things grow).30
7257313579Phoenixa bird that is immortal, but dies in a self-built pyre every 500 or 600 years and is then reborn from the ashes; a symbol of rebirth and/or immortality.31
7257313580Poseidon / Neptunegod of the sea; often pictured with his 3-pronged scepter, the trident; has a son named Triton32
7257313581Prometheusa Titan (preceded Zeus and the Olympian gods) who created man from clay. Later, he stole fire from the gods and gave it to man against the will of Zeus. As a punishment, he was chained to a rock and had his liver eaten out every day by an eagle. The liver grew back each night, only to be eaten out the next day. Eventually, he was released by Hercules.33
7257313582Psychea great mortal beauty, whom Venus was very jealous of, because of her beauty. Cupid loved her but didn't want her to know who he was, so he visited her only in the dark. She was curious and eventually snuck a light into their meeting place and shone it suddenly in his face. He was angry for a while but eventually forgave her and had her made immortal. She became the goddess of emotion.34
7257313583SisyphusA wealthy man who cheated the living and, later, the gods. He was sentenced by Zeus to forever push a boulder up a hill, only to fail before it reaches the top.35
7257313584Styx (river)the river that divides the land of the living from Hades, the land of the dead The Sirens: a group of nymphs who lived on an island and lured men to their destruction with their sweet singing.36
7257313585The TitansThe TITANS ruled the world after having dethroned their father Uranus, the first ruler of the universe. It was their mother Gaia who persuaded them to attack their father and overthrow him; for she grieved at the destruction of her children, the CYCLOPES and the HECATONCHEIRES, who had been cast into Tartarus by Uranus. The Titan Cronos then ambushed his father and castrated him with a sickle, being himself appointed by the TITANS to be their sovereign. However, once in power, Cronos behaved as his father, and again shut the CYCLOPES and the HECATONCHEIRES up in Tartarus.37
7257313586Zephyrthe west wind, which is known for being warm and soft.38
7257313587Zeusking of the gods - Zeus was allotted the dominion of the sky, having waged war against Cronos and the TITANS. Zeus, some say, caused the Trojan War, so that the load of death might empty the world. Zeus got the thunderbolt, his ultimate weapon, from the CYCLOPES, and an eagle brings back the thunderbolts which he has flung. Zeus is married to his sister, Hera.39

AP Literature Terms Flashcards

Poetry terms

Terms : Hide Images
7882584973ALLEGORYstory or poem in which characters, settings, and events stand for other people or events or for abstract ideas or qualities0
7882584974ALLITERATIONrepetition of the same or similar consonant sounds in words that are close together1
7882584975ALLUSIONreference to someone or something that is known from history, literature, religion politics, sports, science, or another branch of culture. An indirect reference to something (usually from literature etc.).,2
7882584976ANALOGYComparison made between two things to show how they are alike,3
7882584977ASSONANCEthe repetition of similar vowel sounds followed by different consonant sounds especially in words that are together4
7882584979CONCEITan elaborate metaphor that compares two things that are startlingly different. Often an extended metaphor.5
7882584980CONNOTATIONthe associations and emotional overtones that have become attached to a word or phrase in addition to its strict dictionary definition.,6
7882584981COUPLETtwo consecutive rhyming lines of poetry.,7
7882584982DICTIONa speaker or writer's choice of words.,8
7882584983ELEGYa poem of mourningusually about someone who has died. This is great praise or commendation a laudatory speech, often about someone who has died.9
7882584985FARCEa type of comedy in which ridiculous and often stereotyped characters are involved in silly far-fetched situations.10
7882584986FIGURATIVE LANGUAGEWords which are inaccurate if interpreted literally but are used to describe. Similes and metaphors are common forms.11
7882584987FLASHBACKa scene that interrupts the normal chronological sequence of events in a story to depict something that happened at an earlier time.12
7882584988FOILA character who acts as contrast to another character. Often a funny side kick to the dashing hero or a villain contrasting the hero.13
7882584989FORESHADOWINGthe use of hints and clues to suggest what will happen later in a plot.14
7882584990FREE VERSEpoetry that does not conform to a regular meter or rhyme scheme.15
7882584991HYPERBOLEa figure of speech that uses an incredible exaggeration or overstatement for effect. "If I told you once I've told you a million times...."16
7882584992IMAGERYthe use of language to evoke a picture or a concrete sensation of a person , a thing a place, or an experience.,17
7882584993IRONYa discrepancy between appearances and reality.,18
7882584994VERBAL IRONYoccurs when someone says one thing but really means something else.19
7882584995SITUATIONAL IRONYtakes place when there is a discrepancy between what is expected to happen or what would be appropriate to happen, and what really does happen.20
7882584996DRAMATIC IRONYis so called because it is often used on stage. A character in the play or story thinks one thing is true but the audience or reader knows better.21
7882584997LITOTESis a form of understatement in which the positive form is emphasized throughthe negation of a negative form: Hawthorne--- "...the wearers of petticoat and farthingale...stepping forth into the public ways and wedging their not unsubstantial persons if occasion were, into the throng...",22
7882584998LYRIC POEMa poem that does not tell a story but expresses the personal feelings or thoughts of the speaker.23
7882584999METAPHORa figure of speech that makes a comparison between two unlike things without the use of such specific words of comparison as likeas, than, or resembles.,24
7882585000IMPLIED METAPHORdoes not state explicitly the two terms of the comparison:25
7882585001EXTENDED METAPHORis a metaphor that is extended or developed as far as the writer wants to take it. (conceit if it is quite elaborate).26
7882585002METONYMYa figure of speech in which a person, place, or thing, is referred to by something closely associated with it. "We requested from the crown support for our petition." The crown is used to represent the monarch.27
7882585003MOODAn atmosphere created by a writer's diction and the details selected.28
7882585004ONOMATOPOEIAthe use of words whose sounds echo their sense. "Pop." "Zap.",29
7882585005OXYMORONa figure of speech that combines opposite or contradictory terms in a brief phrase. "Jumbo shrimp." "Pretty ugly." "Bitter-sweet"30
7882585006PARADOXa statement that appears self-contradictory, but that reveals a kind of truth.,31
7882585007PARALLEL STRUCTUREthe repetition of words or phrases that have similar grammatical structures32
7882585008PERSONIFICATIONa figure of speech in which an object or animal is given human feelings thoughts, or attitudes.,33
7882585009QUATRAINa poem consisting of four lines, or four lines of a poem that can be considered as a unit.34
7882585012RHETORICAL QUESTIONa question asked for an effect, and not actually requiring an answer.35
7882585013SIMILEa figure of speech that makes an explicitly comparison between two unlike things using words such as like, as , than, or resembles.,36
7882585015SYNECDOCHEa figure of speech in which a part represents the whole. "If you don'tdrive properly you will lose your wheels." The wheels represent the entire car.,37
7882585016THEMEthe insight about human life that is revealed in a literary work.,38
7882585017TONEthe attitude a writer takes toward the subject of a work, the characters in it, or the audiencerevealed through diction, figurative language, and organization.,39

Dracula Flashcards

Dracula is an 1897 Gothic horror novel by Irish author Bram Stoker.[1]
Famous for introducing the character of the vampire Count Dracula, the novel tells the story of Dracula's attempt to relocate from Transylvania to England, and the battle between Dracula and a small group of men and women led by Professor Abraham Van Helsing.
Dracula has been assigned to many literary genres including vampire literature, horror fiction, the gothic novel and invasion literature. The novel touches on themes such as the role of women in Victorian culture, sexual conventions, immigration, colonialism, and post-colonialism. Although Stoker did not invent the vampire, he defined its modern form, and the novel has spawned numerous theatrical, film and television interpretations. (Wikipedia)

Terms : Hide Images
3085085116contagious(of disease) capable of being transmitted by infection0
3085085117flutteringthe motion made by flapping up and down1
3085085118craggyhaving strong features and deep lines2
3085085119bereavedgreatly saddened at being deprived by death of a love one3
3085085120ferociousextreme or intense4
3085085121brandishingto shake or wave, as a weapon5
3085085122hell-hounda mythical watch dog of hell6
3085085123desecrationtreating something sacred with violent disrespect7
3085085124genealogythe study and tracing of lines of descent or development8
3085085125headlanda narrow piece of land that projects from a coastline into the sea9
3085085126credenceacceptance of something as true10
3085085127trinketa small ornament or piece of jewellery11
3085085128congealingto solidify or take shape12
3085085129anaemiaa condition in which the body does not have enough red blood cells13
3085085130halestrong and healthy14
3085085131scurriesmoves about quickly15
3085085132availuse to one's advantage16
3085085133scaldthe act of burning with steam or hot water17
3085085134defilespot, stain, or pollute18
3085085135unfetteredrelease from restraint or inhibition19
3085085136ravingstalking wildly20
3085085137superstitiona belief in good or bad luck and other things that cannot be explained21
3085085138transfusionsthe process of transferring blood from a person to something else22
3085085139psychosissevere mental diseases that make you believe things that aren't real23
3085085140frailweak or unhealthy24
3085085141composurethe feeling of being calm25
3085085142emaciatedabnormally thin or feeble26
3085085143oppressivenessweigh somebody down with worry or sadness27
3085085144inevitableunavoidable; sure to happen28
3085085145enduresuffer or put up with pain or hardship29
3085085146ambiguousopen to more than one interpretation30
3085085147immenseextremely large; huge31
3085085148envisageto form a mental image of something; visualize32
3085085149purgeto free from impurities; purify33
3085085150savagelynot domesticated or cultivated; wild34
3085085151unwholesomedetrimental to physical or moral well-being35
3085085152dwellsmakes your home; lives36
3085085153primitivelittle evolved from or characteristic of an earlier ancestral type37
3085085154allayto calm or reduce someone's fear or suspicion.38
3085085155amenitiesfacilities, services, benefits.39
3085085156incessantlycontinuous, continual, constant, ceaseless.40
3085085157inflictedcause something unpleasant or painful to be suffered by someone or something41
3085085158oraclea wise or knowledgeable advisor.42
3085085159chapelsmall church (in a prison, college, or hospital)43
3085085160barbarismuncivilized, brutal behavior; cruelty44
3085085161engulfto swallow up, overwhelm, consume45
3085085162condolencesexpressions of sympathy with another in grief46
3085085163pitilessshowing no sorrow or regret for another's suffering or troubles47
3085085164falterthe act of pausing uncertainly; to lose momentum48
3085085165solicitora British lawyer who gives legal advice and prepares legal documents49
3085085166aquiline(of a person's nose) curved like an eagle's beak50
3085085167profusiona large quantity of something51
3085085168sustenancethe act of sustaining life by food or providing a means of subsistence52
3085085169gallantunflinching in battle or action53
3085085170penultimatenext to the last54
3085085171insatiableimpossible to satiate or satisfy55
3085085172anguishsuffer great pains or distress56
3085085173perceiveto become aware of through the senses57
3085085174onslaughta fierce attack58
3085085175nuisancea person or thing that causes annoyance59
3085085176contagionthe communication of disease60
3085085177abominablevery unpleasant61
3085085178protuberantbulging62
3085085179palloran unhealthy, pale appearance63
3085085180vitalityliveliness or energy64
3085085181foresawbe aware of beforehand65
3085085182ruddinesshaving a healthy red color66
3085085183asylumshelter or protection from danger67
3085085184cryptan underground room or vault beneath a church68
3085085185expansean area of something typically land or sea, presenting a wide continuos surface69
3085085186co-existentexist at the same time or in the same place70
3085085187crammingto force, press, or squeeze into an insufficient space; stuff.71
3085085188cuspa cone-shaped prominence on the surface of a tooth72
3085085189subdueovercome or bring under control73
3085085190wretchedvery unfortunate in condition or circumstances74
3085085191luringtempt a person or animal into a trap75
3085085192unnaturalnot natural76
3085085193repressto keep under control, check or supress77
3085085194entrustedsomeone or something given over to another for care or protection78
3085085195summatenglish slang for something79
3085085196lethargicsluggishness, slowness, or dullness80
3085085197quellto put an end to81
3085085198primitivevery simple and undeveloped82
3085085199abominablevery bad, shocking83
3085085200loatheto hate84
3085085201insatiablethat cannot be satisfied85
3085085202rapturea feeling of extreme happiness86
3085085203aristocrata member of the aristocracy87
3085085204remoteto be far away or isolated88
3085085205forthcomingto be happening soon89
3085085206distressto have great sorrow, pain, or scatter90
3085085207anticipationto have taken action in advance about something you are aware of91
3085085208emancipatedfreed from bondage92
3085085209delve(v.) to dig; to search deeply and thoroughly into93
3085085210turnsundergo a transformation94
3085085211pactan agreement between persons, groups or nations95
3085085212castchoose at random96
3085085213utterlycomplete of absolute97
3085085214crucifixA cross which romans killed people98
3085085215patriotspeople who vigorously support their country and is prepared to defend it against enemies or detractors99
3085085216confinekeep or restrict someone or something within100
3085085217repulsionthe act of repulsin,or the state of being repulsed101
3085085218witheredto shrivel102
3085085219foea person who feels enmity,hatred,or malice toward another103
3085085220morbidsuggesting an unhealthy mental state or attitude104
3085085221terrorintense, sharp, overmastering fear105

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