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AP Spanish Literature Terms Flashcards

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6809499344vanguardismorefers to people or works that are experimental or innovative, particularly in regard to art , the culture , the politics , philosophy and literature.0
6809499345surrealismoan artistic movement emerged in France from Dadaism , in the early 1920s , around the personality of the poet André Breton.1
6809499346postmodernismoPost-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
6809499347neoclasicismoemerged 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
6809499348costumbrismothe literary or pictorial interpretation of local everyday life, mannerisms, and customs, primarily in the Hispanic scene, and particularly in the 19th century.4
6809499349culteranismoa 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
6809499350conceptismoa 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
6809499351retruécanoJuegos de palabras; inversión de los términos de una cláusula o proposición en otra subsiguiente para que esta última choque con la anterior.7
6809499352sinestesiaDescripción de una sensación o imagen por medio de sensaciones percibidas por distintos órganos sensoriales, por ejemplo, vista y olfato.8
6809499353sinécdoqueTipo de metáfora que usa una parte o cualidad de un objeto físico para representar todo el objeto.9
6809499354polisíndetonRepetición de conjunciones para alargar la frase o hacer más `solemne la expresión.10
6809499355paradojaContraposición de dos conceptos contradictorios que expresan una verdad.11
6809499356metonimiaUn 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
6809499357epítetoPalabra o frase delante o después del nombre que sirve para caracterizar al personaje13
6809499358cacofoníaUso de palabras que combinan sonidos desagradables, ásperos y cortantes.14
6809499359asíndetonOmisión de conjunciones o palabras para suscitar viveza o energía.15
6809499360ironía 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
6809499361silvaPoema no estrófico que combina versos de siete y once sílabas, entrelazados por rima consonante y versos libres.17
6809499362narrador 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
6809499363leitmotivRepetición de una palabra, frase, situación o noción. Motivo recurrente en una obra.19
6809499364realismo 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
6809499365pícaroPersonaje de baja condición, astuto, ingenioso y de mal vivir que protagoniza la novela picaresca21
6809499366novela 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
6809499367naturalismoCorriente 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
6809499368modernismoMovimiento 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
6809499369libro 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
6809499370Generación 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
6809499371Edad 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
6809499372boomEn 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
6809499373barrocoMovimiento cultural español (1580-1700) caracterizado por su complejidad y su extravagante ornamentación, cuyo propósito era asombrar e incitar introspección29
6809499374hipérbatonAlteración del orden normal sintáctico de las palabras en una oración.30
6809499375apóstrofeRecurso en que el hablante se dirige a personas presentes o ausentes, a seres animados o a objetos inanimados31
6809499376antítesisYuxtaposición de una palabra, frase o idea a otra de significación contraria32
6809499377anáforaRepetición de palabras en una sucesión de versos o enunciados.33
6809499378teatro 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
6809499379sonetoPoema 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
6809515729el renacimiento36

AP Literature Vocabulary Flashcards

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5640189970AmbulatoryAdj: Relating to walking0
5640193052ChurlishAdj: Rude1
5640195904DiffidentAdj: Shy2
5640199335EnnuiNoun: boredom3
5640201998InscrutableAdj: Impossible to understand4
5640208675PrognosticateVerb: Foretell5
5640213019SchismNoun: Division6
5640217148SeditionNoun: Encourage speech for people to rebel7
5640222437ThwartVerb: Prevent8
5640225283WizenedAdj: Shruken9

Poetic Unit AP Literature Flashcards

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5732531636Versea literary for that employs a marked rhythm, usually employs rhyme, usually uses a fixed stanza pattern and sometimes employ a figure of speech.0
5732540868Meteris to poetry what the beat or time signature is to music. a systematic arrangement of heavily stressed or accented and lightly stressed or unaccented syllables1
5732549346Poetic FootA combination of one accented syllable with one or more unaccented syllables2
5732553294Iambica poetic foot. where one unaccented syllable is followed by an accented. ( /- strong weak)3
5732557508Trochaica poetic foot. that is reverse of iambic ( -/, weak strong)4
5732561227Anapestica poetic foot. accented following two unaccented syllables (--/, weak, weak strong) (introduce)5
5732601972Dactylicpoetic foot. Reverse of anapestic ( /--, strong, weak, weak) (tenderly)6
5732606030Amphibraicpoetic foot. one accented syllable between two unaccented (-/- , weak strong weak)7
5732622449linea line of poetry is named according to the number of poetic feet in the line8
5732626517Monometerone line or foot (-/)9
5732627562Dimetertwo feet10
5732630147TrimeterThree feet11
5732630955Tetrameterfour feet12
5732631609Pentameterfive feet13
5732633468Hexametersix feet14
5732635263Heptameterseven feet15
5732636021Octametereight feet16
5732637125Scansiona term used when we look at the line of poetry in order to establish it's full name (ex: iambic pentameter, anapestic tetrameter, dactylic trimeter, trochaic trimeter, etc.)17
5732659498SpondeeTwo stressed syllables are placed next to each other to cause jarring or stopping of the rhythmic flow of a line. usually, results in the emphasis on the words where the spondee rests18
5732682787Rhymethe exact or close similarity in sound between words - to tie lines together by the repetition of similar sounds19
5732688730End Rhymethe words at the ends of the lines of poetry are made to sound the same intentionally20
5732691798Masculinetype of end rhyme that ends in a stressed syllable21
5732692866Femininetype of end rhyme where the last syllable is unnacented22
5732694972Tripletype of end rhyme that usually is used for comic relief23
5732699881Assonancea Half rhyme where the vowel sound of two words is matched without any regard for the consonants24
5732703351Consonancea half rhyme where the final consonants in the stressed syllables agree but the vowels that precede them differ25
5732707167Internal Rhymea word in the middle of the line is made to rhyme with a word at the end of the same line, or several words within the line are rhymed26
5732712702Refrainthe repeating of words or groups of words within or the end of a stanza. tends to produce a lingering effect on the memory thus serves to emphasize27
5732718050Blank VerseA pattern of poetry that employs iambic pentameter lines but no rhyme. Has rhythm but no rhyme28
5732728083Free Versethis pattern is bound to no fixed rhyme scheme and the rhythm varies constantly. some of them almost looks like a prose29
5732737735Quatrainthis pattern is common in lyrics and narrative poetry. it employs for lines tied together by rhyme, this form is used to express emotion in a simple manner or to tell a story ( ABCD, ABBA, ABAB, ABCA)30
5732748789Tripletthree lines have been linked together with rhyme31
5732751475Coupletconsists of two lines usually of the same length tied together by rhyme32
5732754810open coupleta thought hasn't been completed33
5732755620closed coupletthought is complete34
5732756398lyric stanzathis pattern very common in lyric poetry. the poet is free to make up any pattern of line he chooses but once a pattern is created he must stick to it through the rest of the stanza. the number of lines if a stanza is to name stanza pattern35
5732761834sonnetthis pattern employs 14 lines of iambic pentameter rhythm tied together with an intricate rhyme scheme36
5732767087Octavethe first 8 lines expresses a problem or a description of some experience, rhyme scheme usually varies but usually is abbaabba37
5732769310setsetthe next six lines offer a solution to the problem or the comment on the experience, the pattern usually varies but is mostly cdecde or a combination ccddee38
5732777140shakespearian or elizabethan or englishfirst 12 lines are often arranged into three quatrains, each of which given some aspect or thought about an experience. usually abab, cdcd, efef39
5732781688Figure of Speecha word or group of words which in certain ways indicate resemblance or difference usually compares one thing to another to bring out contrast or similarity40
5732785557Similethe comparison of one object with another something else which is in some way similar41
5732788305Metaphorone thing is called something else which resembles in some way. does not use connectives42
5732796762Allegorydescribing one thing in the likeness of another, it is really an expanded metaphor in story form to teach some truth or to illustrate some thought43
5732801052PersonificationAnimals, inanimate objects, or abstract ideas are spoken as if they were persons44
5732803546Hyperbole or exagerationa powerful poetic device when used effectively but very flat if used carelessly45
5732804815ApostropheAnimals, inanimate objects, abstract ideas, absent or dead people are addressed as though present and alive46
5732811524Antithesis or contrastuse of contrast words or ideas so that the difference is startling47
5732812657Ironythe idea in the mind is quite different from or the exact opposite of the statement made, the purpose may be to deride, ridicule or merely achieve humor48
5732816936Metonymythe use of a word to suggest something always associated with it49
5732820197Images and Symbolvisible signs used by the poets to represent or stand for ideas, abstract qualities or emotions. word pictures50
5732824679Repeated themegives the poem unity and emphasis, colors are often used to achieve this theme51
5732826286Allusionreferences to some person, please one thing that the after hopes is sufficiently well known to be recognized by the literate person52

Lesson 4 (AP Language) Flashcards

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4893400199AestheticRelating to a sense of beauty or art0
4893400200AloofApart, indifferent1
4893400201ArchaicAntiquated, old, out of use2
4893400202AssuageTo ease, to make less painful, to calm3
4893400203BelieTo contradict, to give false impression4
4893400204ContentiousQuarrelsome, stirring controversy5
4893400205DauntTo intimidate6
4893400206DebilitateTo weaken7
4893400207DiscordLack of agreement, tension8
4893400208DisseminationThe act of spreding widely, scattering9
4893400209DogmaticStrongly opinionated in an unwarranted manner10
4893400210DuplicityDouble dealing, hypocrisy11
4893400211EgocentricSelf centered, selfish12
4893400212EuphemismSubstitution of an inoffensive term to one that is offensive13
4893400213GluttonousGreedy for food and drink14
4893400214MundaneOrdinary, commonplace15
4893400215OminousThreathing16
4893400216PetulanceUnreasonable touchiness or irritability17
4893400217PompousExaggerated show of dignity or self importance18
4893400218PrecociousExceptionally early in develepment or ocurrence19
4893400219SlothfulLazy, indolent20
4893400220TriviaInsignificant matters21
4893400221VerboseWordy, very talkative22
4893400222VirulentExtremely poisonous, hateful23
4893400223VolatileQuickly changeable, easily vaporized24

AP Spanish Literature Exam Review Flashcards

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5037272679"De lo que acontecío a un mancebo que se casó con una mujer muy fuerte y muy brava."It is a medieval text in Spain and it is a collection of stories. After a man and a woman get married, the man feels like he has all of the power and feels like the wife cannot serve him just like the animals cannot serve him. He treats the position of the woman as if she was one of the animals as well. She has a reputation of not listening to her husband either. The story is very chauvinistic and it shows the TRADITIONAL gender roles at the time. One of the major themes to take away from this story is that if you cannot show what you want or who you are at the beginning, then you will never be able to show that feeling later in the long run. The story is in a modern perspective.0
5037272680"Hombres Necios que acusaís"This work is a satire that takes place and written around the time period of New Spain. This was a very pro-feminist period in a very modern perspective. It says hows stupid men accuse women for things that they didn't do or that are not true. It is an argument sticking up for women and is against men, ALL men. Also gives some of the types of women and how men perceive them such as prostitutes versus angels of the house. Brings up the argument of which is worse... A women who sells herself for money or the man who gives his money for sex. Controversial situation and a very critical work.1
5037272681"Peso Ancestral"This work relates to the weight that women are carrying on their shoulders. This weight is known to the reader as an "emotional" weight and the stress of the men that they are carrying. The work contains images of being heavy to relate to the idea of the weight. For example, the tears of men are venomous and quite heavy to women. The work is feminist and the author is critiquing society.2
5037272682"Mujer Negra"This poem takes place during the time of the slave trade and during the end of the Cuban Revolution which is modern Cuba. This poem has many voices going on beginning with a woman who is working on a plantation. She has sex with a white land owner and her baby is taken away from her because she is not only a woman, but she is african american. This poem ties together the prejudice of non-white races and women. At the end she is freed which is a hope for the future.3
5037272683"Dos Palabras"This a short story about a poor family who doesn't deserve their own names. There is no escape for these people due to their lack of purpose, food, or financial needs. The mother tries to find a job and she starts by reading a dictionary. She begins to sell the words of the dictionary to people and later she is kidnapped by a colonel. The colonel is a candidate for the president and he needs her help to give a two word title for his speech. We find out, based on the title, that he later falls in love with her and vice versa. This story is an example of Magical Realism. This a feminist story about a woman who goes out to take the role of the head person in the family in order to survive.4
5037272684"Visiones de los vencidos"This story is about the Aztecs and their fear of the Spanish attack on their city in the mere future. They account several omens that make them believe that the Spanish are near. Some of these omens are the column of fire, lightning, eclipse, blazing sun, and the screams of women. This story relates to the different societies in contact. The clash between the Aztecs and the Spanish country.5
5037272685"Segunda Carta de Relación"The story is written by Cortes and he is writing about the king of Spain. He describes his plan for taking over the Aztec city of Tenochtítlan. He describes how he entered the city giving the king many gifts and he promised him he would find all the gold in the city. He also promised he would convert the Aztecs to christians "Peacefully." This wasn't true when he and his Spanish army attacked the city killing several Aztecs and torturing them violently. Cortes used a lot of Euphemism in order to water down the situation that happened in the city. This narrative is also an example and a representation of the clash between different societies in contact (Aztecs Versus Spain).6
5037272686"Lazarillo de Tormes"This story is a comedy and is known as being a picaresque piece of literature. It is a broad comedy that satirizes the different types of social roles in a society. It is about a young boy named Lazaro who lives with his mother. His mother is found with a black who steals and is a thief leading Lazaro to be taken a better, or they say, place to live. He is first given over to a blind man who is very mean and abusive. Lazaro doesn't have any food, so tricks the blind man into running into a pole leading him to get food and run away. Lazaro then runs into a cleric. He is very stingy and he has a box that contains bread just in case he runs out of food. The man has an over abundance of food, but being stingy, he saves food in a wooden box with a key. Lazaro gets a hold of the key and puts it in his mouth, so he won't get caught. Lazaro falls asleep with the key in his mouth causing his mouth to make a hissing sound. The cleric thinks it's a snake. At the end, he is caught. He is then with a squire who is from a rich family, but is very poor. He is in trouble because he hasn't payed the rent. Lazaro said the squire was going to get the money when really he was running away and never coming back. In the last chapter, Lazaro works as an important public figure. She is a good woman (doesn't matter since she is a woman and he is rich) The end makes the story a modern perspective.7
5037272687"Nuestra America"This essay is about the unification of Latin American and the idea of how one defines an "American." The essay states the prejudice that the United States has on other parts of America and how they state things and rights for all Americans, even though some people who are Americans don't receive those rights, such as Latin Americans. The United States poses lots of threats on other parts of America and because they have to much power, other countries cannot control them nor have any say in anything. Martí suggests a unification but isn't possible due to United States' imperialistic power. A theme in this essay relates to the prejudices other American races face and how one society under the American branch controls all the other parts.8
5037272688"A Roosevelt"This poem is about expansionism and the idea that Roosevelt has a lot of power. The author is a strong critic and he represents Roosevelt as a strong hold for money and power (Imperialism). Roosevelt controls many parts of the world and modernism is seen in his essay. Again, a theme in this essay relates to the prejudices other American races face and how one society (United States) under the American branch controls all the other parts.9
5037272689"Prendimiento de Camborio de Antoñito"This poem is about gypsies and how their culture is abused in the society that they are living in. A group of gypsies are imprisoned for taking lemons off of a tree in an area where nobody owns those trees. They are blamed for being thieves and sent to prison. The cops take the lemons they picked and make lemonade out of it. This poem shows the abuse of power in the United States and how one group can be ostracized due to their social status in a society. This a Romance poem, contemporary, and takes place during the first part of the twentieth century.10
5037272690WHAT TYPE OF POEM IS THIS? Imperio tuve un tiempo, pasajero, sobre las ondas de la mar salada; del viento fui movida y respetada y senda abrí al Antártico hemisfero. Soy con larga vejez tosco madero; fui haya, y de mis hojas adornada, del mismo que alas hice en mi jornada, lenguas para cantar hice primero. Acompaño esta tumba tristemente, y aunque son de Colón estos despojos, su nombre callo, venerable y santo, de miedo que, de lástima, la gente tanta agua ha de verter con tiernos ojos, que al mar nos vuelva a entrambos con el llanto.SONNET11
5037272691Author of "Dos Palabras"Allende12
5037272692Author "Romance de la pérdida de Alhama"Anonymous13
5037272693Author of "Lazarillo de Tormes"Anonymous14
5037272694Author of "Volverán de las oscuras golondrinas"Becquer15
5037272695Author of "Borges y yo"Borges16
5037272696Author of "El Sur"Borges17
5037272697Author of "A Julia de Burgos"Burgos18
5037272698Author of "Don Quijote"Cervantes19
5037272699Author of "La Noche Boca Arriba"Cortázar20
5037272700Author of "Segunda Carta de Relación"Cortés21
5037272701Author of "Hombres necios que acusaís"de la Cruz22
5037272702Author of "A Roosevelt"Darío23
5037272703Author of "De lo que acontecío a un mancebo que se casó con una mujer muy fuerte y muy brava."Don Juan Manuel24
5037272704Author of "El hombre que se convirtió en perro"Dragún25
5037272705Author of "Chac Mool"Fuentes26
5037272706Author of "La casa de Bernarda Alba"Lorca27
5037272707Author of "Prendimiento de Antoñito el Camborio en el camino de Sevilla"Lorca28
5037272708Author of "El ahogado más hermoso del mundo"Marquez29
5037272709Author of "La siesta del martes"Marquez30
5037272710Author of "en tanto que de rosa y azucena"Vega31
5037272711Author of "Mientras por competir con tu cabello"Góngora32
5037272712Author of "Balada de los dos abuelos"Guíllen33
5037272713Author of "En una tempestad"Heredia34
5037272714Author of "Visión de los Vencidos"Portilla35
5037272715Author of "He andado muchos caminos"Machado36
5037272716Author of "Nuestra América"Martí37
5037272717Author of "Como la vida misma"Montero38
5037272718Author of "Mujer Negra"Moréjon39
5037272719Author of "Walking Around"Neruda40
5037272720Author of "Las Medias Rojas"Bazán41
5037272721Author of "Miré los muros de la patria mía"Quevedo42
5037272722Author of "El Hijo"Quiroga43
5037272723Author of "y no se lo trago la tierra"Rivera44
5037272724Author of "No oyes ladrar los perros"Rulfo45
5037272725Author of "Peso Ancestral"Storni46
5037272726Author of "El Burlador de Sevilla y Convidado de Piedra"Molina47
5037272727Author of "Mi Caballo Mago"Ulibarri48
5037272728Author of "San Manuel Bueno, mártir"Unamuno49
5037272729alegoríaallegory: is a rhetorical device in which characters or events in a literary, visual, or musical art form represent or symbolize ideas and concepts.50
5037272730Alejandrinoa 14 syllable verse divided into two 7 syllable lines.51
5037272731AliteraciónAlliteration pero pepe piensa un plan de preparar un dinero.52
5037272732AlusiónAllusion: in literature, an implied or indirect reference to a person, event, or thing or to a part of another text.53
5037272733Renacimiento (Renaissance)-A rebirth or revival. -The humanistic revival of classical art, architecture, literature, and learning that originated in Italy in the 14th century and later spread throughout Europe. -The period of this revival, roughly the 14th through the 16th century, marking the transition from medieval to modern times.54
5037272734Baroque (Barroco)-Relating to, or characteristic of a style in art and architecture developed in Europe from the early 17th to mid-18th century, emphasizing dramatic, often strained effect and typified by bold, curving forms, elaborate ornamentation, and overall balance of disparate parts. --Fluidity and over the top -Extravagant, complex, or bizarre, especially in ornamentation.55
5037272735Surrealism (Surrealismo)A 20th-century literary and artistic movement that attempts to express the workings of the subconscious and is characterized by fantastic imagery and incongruous juxtaposition of subject matter. Many random images clashed together as striking and Bizarre to understand the mentality of the author, poet, or writer.56
5037272736Modernism (Modernismo)-Modern thought, character, or practice. -Sympathy with or conformity to modern ideas, practices, or standards.57
5037272737Picaresque (Picáro)-Of or involving clever rogues or adventurers. -Of or relating to a genre of usually satiric prose fiction originating in Spain and depicting in realistic, often humorous detail the adventures of a roguish hero of low social degree living by his or her wits in a corrupt society. (Lazarillo de Tormes).58
5037272738Estrofastanza59
5037272739Eufemismo (Euphemism)watering down harsh situations with "kinder" words60
5037272740Vistazo RetrospectivoFlashback61
5037272741Figura retorica(figure of speech)62
5037272742Exposición (exposition)The portion of a story that introduces important background information to the audience.63
5037272743EstribilloA phrase or verse recurring at intervals in a song or poem, especially at the end of each stanza; chorus.64
5037272744Epítetoadding unnecessary adjectives for aesthetic purposes65
5037272745EnumeraciónA collection of items that is a complete, ordered listing of all of the items in that collection.66
5037272746Épicaepic poetry.67
5037272747EncabalgamientoIt is when the ideas in on verse continue over into the next verse of the.68
5037272748ElipsisDenotes a time or omission of one's thought and pondering. The omission from a sentence or other construction of one or more words that would complete or clarify the construction.69
5037272749EcoCreated by repetition of words or parts of words.70
5037272750DramaLess violent than a tragedy and composition in prose or verse presenting in dialogue or pantomime a story involving conflict or contrast of character.71
5037272751CuartetoFour line stanzas, 11 syllables each ABBA72
5037272752CuartetaFour line stanzas, 8 syllables each ABAB73
5037272753CromatismoThe use of colors to express ideas and feelings.74
5037272754Copla (couplet)Two verses (usually joined by a rhyme)75
5037272755ComposiciónAn analysis of the structure, verses, and stanzas of a poem.76
5037272756Comedia (comedy)Is any sort of performance intended to cause laughter or the emotions associated with laughter.77
5037272757Climaxculmination (highest peak of the story where all unfolds)78
5037272758Carpe DiemSeize the day, and the enjoyment of the pleasures of the moment without concern for the future. Live ever day like it is your last. Non-religious.79
5037272759AsíndetonThe omission of connecting words such as -and -but -more80
5037272760Arte menorVerses that have 8 or fewer syllables81
5037272761Arte MayorVerses of more than 8 syllables82
5037272762ArquetipoThe original pattern or model of which all things of the same type are representations or copies. Perfect**83
5037272763Argumento (resumen)Plot or storyline.84
5037272764Apostrofe (apostrophe)The addressing of a usually absent person or a usually personified thing rhetorically.85
5037272765AparteAn aside where other characters do not hear or know it.86
5037272766AntítesisThe juxtaposition of two opposing ideas, contrast, contradiction.87
5037272767AntihéroeLike the antagonist, but not have the qualities of an antagonist since he/she is not heroic enough.88
5037272768AntagonistaAgainst the protagonist89
5037272769AnalogíaA comparison of two things based on their being alike in some way.90
5037272770AnáforaRepetition of a word or expression at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, sentences, or verses especially for rhetorical or poetic effect.91
5037272771Bildungs RomanThe horse escapes and that the kid cannot hold onto these fantasies. This is the idea of the coming of age.92
5037272772"Mi Caballo Mago"They are west of the United States. They are trying to capture the white horse. They think the horse is very magical and has many powers, Actually, the horse not have these powers or they don't know that it has these kinds of powers. The author realizes that he does not need to capture the horse. It is Bildungs Roman and relates to the coming of age and how one has the ability to be okay with letting go of fantasies.93
5037272773CircunlocuciónUse other words to go around that word to build suspense or intensity.94
5037272774DesdoblamientoSplitting or doubling identities.95
5037272775"Don Quijote"-realidad versus fantasía -Identity (Got there by all books he read). -Cervantes saying he translated it. Labryinth.96
5037272776"Volverán las oscuras golondrinas"Romantic movement and it is a poem that is about a couple that broke up and the woman went with another guy. The guy is saying that she will regret it and that the guy isn't as good as he was when they were together. The swallows in the title represent the time passed between the man and the woman in the relationship, carpe diem. The opportunity of love between them is going away and the golondrinas show that moving away happening.97
5037272777"Las Medias Rojas"A girl that is a prostitute for her dad and she goes out to buy red stockings with her father's money. Once she gets the tights, her father, Tío Cladio, beats her and her beauty is lost. She doesn't have anymore beauty anymore not making her able to move to the United States anymore. Her ticket to go to the US was her beauty. The literary movement is naturalism because it shows the life of poor people and of a poor woman. The color red represents sex and prostitution.98
5037272778"El Hijo"A kid goes hunting with his father in the forest. His father then lets him go off into the wilderness solo leading to the son's death at the end of the story. The father has a hallucination asking why his son was so late in return while in reality his son was dead in a barbed wire fence. The literary movement is naturalism and one could make the argument of the theme as time and reality versus fantasy. The pistol and the gun represent violence, teaching, maturity, and most importantly foreshadow danger.99
5037272779"La Casa de Bernarda Alba"A play in spain where the head of the house is a tyrant mother named Bernarda who takes care of her daughters who are nuns. The mother is very strict and controls every aspect in the household and in the lives of the daughters. The literary movement is naturalism and modernism.100
5037272780"No Oyes Ladrar los perros"Realism. This story is about a father who is taking his dying son to a town called Tonanya. This story represents the hope for Ignacio,son to become a better person, but ends up dying. Ignacio was not noble and he was ready to die due to his lack of honor.101
5037272781"Como la vida misma"It is a short story that puts the reader in the driver seat of a traffic jam taken place in a parking lot. The second person puts the reader into the stressful and tiring situation of traffic in an anonymous city. The narrator is talking to us making us, the readers, the protagonists. Car 1 (protagonist) wants the parking space, he got the space because he drives like a crazy person. Car 2 got out of the space because he was leaving and car 1 almost hit car 2. Car 1 gets mad saying all are bad drivers when he is really the bad driver since he almost hit car 2. Irony. Realistic.102
5037272782"La siesta del Martes"A mother and a daughter take a train ride into a city during the time of a siesta. It is very hot and the mother and daughter have little to no money. They went to go see Carlos who is the mother's son who was caught stealing money for the survival of his family. He was a good guy but did abad action in order to survive. Nobody socializes with them when they show up because 1) they are poor, and 2) nobody wants to mess around with a thief. The hotness represents the poorness of the mother and daughter. If they had the money, they could sit on the train where air conditioning was present.103
5037272783"El hombre que se convirtió en perro"This a short play that takes place during the reign of Perón so it's a modern work. There aren't any names only actors and it is a satire. The play is a meta-drama (meta-fiction) which is a play within a play. The main actor begins to feel bad because he doesn't have a job because there is an economic crisis and there isn't enough money to go around. He looks for a job and gets one as a watch man. He cannot be human and he accepts the job. His wife Maria is scared for him because he is like a dog and she is scared her son that she has is going to be a dog as well. He kisses the hand then bites it off (satire). This play satirizes the time of Perón and how the workers were treated and the roles they all played in society at the time.104
5037272784"Y no se tragó la tierra."This a story about illegal immigrants who come to America (United States) to try to find a job and they cannot get one successfully. The women cannot work for sure and the terrible heat conditions in the fields cause heat strokes and they do not have the money to get one to a hospital. They also don't have documents even if they did have the money for hospitals. The narrator is the fictional person of the author. This story is related to the social interactions of societies.105
5037272785"Noche Buena"A mother goes to the store to buy her children christmas presents. She has never done this before and she gets really scared when she walks in. Her anxiety takes over and she runs out of the store with they toys without purchasing them. She is found guilty for stealing. She is an illegal immigrant and she told her kids they will get toys on Dia de los reyes magos isntead. The kids know what was going on and accepted the fact that toys weren't everything about the holiday of christmas.106
5037272786"En tanto que de rosa y azucena"Carpe Diem. It is a poem about a man describing the beauty of his woman and how it won't last forever. She has a relationship between herself and nature. This a very Renaissance styled poem.107
5037272787"Mientras por competir con tu cabello"Carpe Diem. It is a poem Baroque styled poem describing how beauty doesn't last very long but this poem has lots of fluidity and is over the top.108
5037272788"Mire los muros de la patria mía"A man walks through his city describing the current state that it is in. He is in Spain and describing how it is decaying. He says how his house is stained and how he has a walking stick and how his sword (youth) is overcome with age. Carpe Diem (Memento Mori). This city is making him older as well. It is Baroque and a sonnet poem.109
5037272789"En una tempestad"This a work that is between Neoclassicism and Romanticism. Neoclassicism is returning the the original greek and roman classics and Romanticism deals with emotions. The language of the poem is CLASSIC and the romantic part of the poem focuses on the feeling and power of nature itself. The perspective is the man who is tortured by this powerful god. This person is talking to god in this massive hurricane and the poem is strongly religious (catholicism). The feeling is very overwhelming.110
5037272790"He andado muchos caminos"Describes two groups of people in the poem. Group one are a group of poor people who are the ones that do all the work and are known as the ideal people. Group two are the ones who are rich and don't have to work, but get money through inheritance. Very general society and at the end, doesn't matter if you are good or bad, all end up in the same place. Memento Mori. Live your life the way you want to but know all go to the same place at the end. Very pessimistic.111
5037272791"Walking Around"He is sick of being a man and being alive. He doesn't want to see anything anymore. Sexual and psychological things are going on in his mind. This is a very surreal poem. The elements he sees and describes have no significance. Pessimistic.112
5037272792"Chac Mool"The literary movement is fantasy and the story related to circular time. A guy on a train is reading a story about a man named Filiberto who is the house that the reader is visiting. Filiberto finds this statue of Chac Mool in the basement, who is the god of water. The statue is fake, polished and is alive. The statue comes to life and takes the place of Filiberto at the end. He is wearing his clothes. Filiberto ends up drowning (se algó) in the ocean.113
5037272793"Balada de los dos Abuelos"A man talks about both of his grandfathers. One is black and one is white. They are both similar and both guerreros. The black grandfather (facundo) is owned by the white grandfather (Federico). The tambores give the poem rhythm at the end. Theme is the idea of Mezcla or Mestizaje (mix of races). He is present in both of his grandfathers.114
5037272794"A julia de Burgos"Very personal poem. Two types of Julia, one is the public one and the other is the private one. She is a cold hearted doll full of social lies. They are both fighting each other, nobody is "winning" over the other. The voice of the poem is the private Julia.115
5037272795"Borges y yo"This short essay has no form. There is a public and private Borges as well. One wins, and there is not any fight. Borges points out that his writing belongs to the other Borges, by the end, we do not know who the real Borges is. Borges not able to separate his identities.116
5037272796"El sur"We don't know if Dahlmann died in the hospital or not. He is very similar to both his grandpas. At the beginning he represents his cleric grandpa as a librarian and later a guerrero when he fights the man in the fields with the knife. This story is a fantasy and has to do with reality versus dreaming. His family lived in the south, so there is repetition to spark further confusion. The cafe is pink like his house when he grew up there.117
5037272797"La Noche Boca Arriba"A man gets into a motorcycle accident. The persons cannot be divided, running from the aztecs which is the knife of the surgeon.118
5037272798"El Ahogado mas hermosa del mundo"Magical Realism Very weird The washed up body (presence) brings purpose to the people on the island. Put him back in ocean for respect. He never "rots"119
5037272799"San Manuel Bueno Martir"The novela tells the story of the local Catholic Priest (Don Manuel) in fictional Valverde de Lucerna, Spain as told through the eyes of Angela, one of the townspeople. Throughout the course of the story Manuel is adored by the people of the town. He is constantly in the service of the townspeople. He refrains from condemning anyone and goes out of his way to help those whom the people have marginalized. Instead of refusing to allow the holy burial of someone who committed suicide, don Manuel explains that he is sure that in the last moment, the person would have repented for their sin. Also, instead of excommunicating a woman who had an illegitimate child, as the Catholic Church would have done, don Manuel arranges a marriage between the woman and her ex-boyfriend, so that order will return to the town, and the child will have a father figure. The people of the town consider him their "Saint" because of all of the good deeds he does. Angela, after a brief stint away for education, returns to the town to live with her mother where she continues to be amazed at Manuel's devotion. Later, Lazarus, Angela's brother returns from the New World, disgusted with the mental and physical poverty he finds in the town. He too is amazed at Manuel's devotion but believes that "He is too intelligent to believe everything he teaches." It is clear that Lazarus does not have a sense of faith. Angela's and Lazarus's mother passes away. On her death bed she makes Lazarus promise to pray for her—he swears he will. Her dying wish is that Manuel can convert him. Lazarus begins following don Manuel "to the lake" where Manuel is known to walk and think. Time passes and Lazarus takes Communion—to the townspeople, he appears to be converted. In reality, Lazarus is only praying for his mother's sake because it was her wish, not because he has faith. Immediately following the Communion, Lazarus sits down with Angela and tells her that he has something he must tell her: Both Manuel and Lazarus have no faith in God, specifically no belief in an after-life. Angela is upset and incredulous but confronts Manuel about what Lazarus has said. In their conversation it becomes obvious that what Lazarus has said is accurate. Manuel believes that religion and the preaching of religion is the only way for the people to live contentedly—Lazarus through their talks had come to admire Manuel's determination to do what he thought was right despite his lack of belief in the veracity of what he taught. To that end, Lazarus felt it best to continue in the same way by returning to the fold. Although Angela questions the goodness of such a deed, Lazarus insists that don Manuel is a saint for the things he has done all his life for the town. Manuel grows increasingly weak. He is unable to bear the weight of teaching the resurrection when he does not believe it is real. He falls further and further into a depression, the towns people see this as a reflection of Christ in their local priest. When Manuel dies he chooses to do so in public in the center of the town, and the people see him as their "second Christ." Lazarus takes on Manuel's role until his own death. Angela moves out of town. She finishes her narration by explaining that Manuel is being considered for beatification and that he is being held up as the ideal and exemplar priest.120
5037272800"romance de la perdida de alhama"The narrator does not want to believe that their city has been destroyed. He mounts his horse and goes to the king catillo to explain what happened. Then sounds the trumpet to call all the people and explain the news. When the narrator says "Woe to my Alhama!" Shows the feelings of all the people. This phrase repeats for emphasis and tone of sadness in the village. The second voice is an old Moor, who wonders why the king has called on the people. The third voice is that of the king, who explains that Christians have won the city of Alhama. The fourth voice is the faqih, respecting the king. The king said to have killed a blackberry family, which represents a flower, and the heart of the Moors.121

AP Language and Composition Vocabulary Set 1 Flashcards

For anyone who wants to pass AP Language and composition

Terms : Hide Images
7298458143Nemesis (Noun)A long-standing enemy or rival Synonyms: enemy, adversary, foe Example sentence: The Joker is a well known nemesis to Batman.0
7298464156Turbulent (Adj.)Characterized by conflict, chaos or disorder Synonyms: chaotic, tempestuous, unstable Example sentence: We could not ride our boat because the unstoppable waves of the river were turbulent.1
7298472443Commodity (Noun)raw material or agricultural product that can be bought and sold Synonyms: resource, product, material Example sentence: Markets are the first place to go if you are in need of some commodities.2
7298476689Revile (Verb)criticize in an abusive or angrily insulting manner Synonyms: rebuke, vilify, condemn Example sentence: When best friends begin to revile towards each other, others tend to back away in shock.3
7298484286Admonish (Verb)to warn or caution someone against doing something Synonyms: warn, reprimand, advise Example sentence: Parents usually admonish their kids when they are about to break the rules.4
7298492295Banal (Adj.)lacking in originality, boring Synonyms: predictable, obvious, conventional Example sentence: Although the book series was intriguing at first, it soon became banal due to the many overused situations and characters it described.5
7298503837Glib (Adj.)able to command language, but in a shallow or insincere manner Synonyms: smooth-talking, slick, superficial Example sentence: Although she claims to be my best friend, she never seems interested in what i say and acts glib, despite what she says.6
7298521316Abject (Adj.)extremely bad, difficult, or degrading Synonyms: wretched, hopeless, pitiable Example sentence: Eeyore is famous for always acting as if he was in an abject situation.7
7298537846Finesse (Adj.)intricate and refined delicacy; attention to detail Synonyms: tact, artistry, polish Example sentence: The pliable and swift ballerina danced "Swan Lake" with finesse in front of hundreds of people.8
7298543533Propriety (Noun)the state or quality of conforming to socially accepted standards of behaviors or morals Synonyms: decorum, protocol, decency Example sentence: Since Ariel never lived in the human world prior to her transformation, she didn't understand how to show proper propriety, which explains why she used an eating utensil to brush her hair.9

AP literature Exam Study Guide Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
596344907AllegoryA story illustrating an idea or a moral principle in which objects take on symbolic meanings.0
596344908AnachronismA word derived from the Greek that literally means 'misplaced in time.'1
596344909AnaphoraThe repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of consecutive lines or sentences Ex: In the poem of Phenomenal Woman by Maya Angelou, the phrase "Phenomenal Woman" is a repetition.2
596344910AntecedentThe word or phrase to which a pronoun refers. It often precedes a pronoun in prose or in poetry. EX: Tom wants to study Political Science; he finds it interesting3
596344911AnthropomorphismIn literature, when inanimate objects, animals or natural phenomena are given human characteristics, behavior or motivation. Often used with animal to give them human characteristics. EX: The chronicle of Narnia is a great example of a movie that has Anthropomorphism of animals talking.4
596344912AnticlimaxAn often disappointing, sudden end to an intense situation.5
596344913AphorismA brief statement which expresses an observation on life, usually intended as a wise observation.6
596344914ApostropheFigure of speech in which one directly addresses an imaginary person or some abstraction.7
596344915ArchaismThe use of deliberately old-fashioned language.8
596344916ArchetypeA character, situation or symbol that is familiar to people from all cultures because it occurs frequently in literature, myth, religion or folklore.9
596344917BalladA story in poetic form, often about tragic love and usually sung. Ballads were passed down from generation to generation by singers.10
596344918Black HumorThe use of disturbing themes in comedy.11
596344919Blank VerseA poem written in unrhymed iambic pentameter.12
596344920Cacophony/ EuphonyCacophony is an unpleasant combination of sounds. Euphony, the opposite, is a pleasant combination of sounds. These sound effects can be used intentionally to create an effect, or they may appear unintentionally.13
596344921CantoA subdivision of an epic poem.14
596344922ChiasmusA statement consisting of two parallel parts in which the second part is structurally reversed.15
596344923ColloquialismA word or phrase used in everyday conversational English that isn't a part of the accepted 'formal' English. EX: Soft Drink is referred to as Soda or Pop16
596344924ConceitAn unusual metaphor or metaphor that is developed in detail in a paragraph (for a novel) or over several lines (for poetry).17
596344925ConnotationThe associations a word calls to mind. The more connotative a literary work is, the less objective its interpretation becomes.18
596344926DenotationThe dictionary or literal meaning of a word or phrase.19
596344927DenouementThe outcome or clarification at the end of a story that follows the climax and leads to the resolution.20
596344928DidacticA didactic story, speech, essay or play is one in which the author's primary purpose is to instruct, teach or moralize.21
596344929EnjambmentThe continuation of a syntactic unit from one line or couplet of a poem to the next with no pause.22
596344930EpigramA short, clever poem or statement with a witty turn of thought.23
596344931EpigraphA brief quotation found at the beginning of a literary work, reflective of the work's theme.24
596344932Epistolary novelA novel in letter form written by one or more of the characters. The novelist can use this technique to present varying first person viewpoints and does not need a narrator.25
596344933ExpositionThe presentation of essential information regarding what has occurred prior to the beginning of the work.26
596344934EuphemismA mild word of phrase which substitutes for another word or phrase which would be undesirable because it is too direct, unpleasant, harsh, or offensive.27
596344935FarceA kind of comedy that depends on exaggerated or improbable situations, physical disasters, and sexual innuendo to amuse the audience.28
596344936HubrisInsolence, arrogance or pride29
596344937HyperboleA wild exaggeration or an overstatement for literary effect that is not meant to be interpreted literally.30
596344938InferenceA judgment based on reasoning rather than on direct or explicit statement.31
596344939InversionA reversal of normal word order32
596344940IronySituational: situation that is the opposite of what you'd expext Verbal: when a writer or speaker says one thing, but really means something completely different. Dramatic: when the reader or audience knows something that the character does not. There is a contrast between what the character says, thinks or does and the true situation. Tragic: dramatic irony that occurs in a tragedy33
596344941LitotesA type of understatement in which the speaker or writer uses a negative of a word ironically, to mean the opposite34
596344942MetonymSubstituting the name of one object for another closely associated with it35
596344943ParableA short story illustrating a moral or religious lesson.36
596344944ParadoxA statement or situation that at first seems impossible, but on closer inspection solves itself and reveals meaning.37
596344945ParodyA literary work that imitates the style of another literary work. A parody can be simply amusing or it can be meant to ridicule the author or his work.38
596344946PastoralA poem, play or story that celebrates and idealizes the simple life of shepherds and shepherdesses. The form was popular until the late 18th century.39
596344947PathosThe quality of a literary work or passage which appeals to the reader's or viewer's emotions—especially pity, compassion and sympathy.40
596344948PunHumorous play on words that have several meanings or words that sound the same but have different meanings.41
596344949SagaA story of the exploits of a hero, or the story of a family told through several generations.42
596344950StructureRefers to how the parts of a work are organized and arranged43
596344951Syllepsis• A construction in which one word is used in two different senses. • The meaning of a verb cleverly changes halfway through a sentence but remains grammatically correct.44
596344952SynecdocheA figure of speech where one part of something represents the whole thing.45
596344953SyntaxThe way in which words, phrases and sentences are ordered and connected. Syntax results in various sentence types used for a variety of rhetorical effects.46

AP Spanish Literature & Culture: Los autores y sus obras Flashcards

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7405358108El conde Lucanor (Ejemplo XXXV: De lo que le pasó a un mancebo que se casó con una mujer muy brava)El infante don Juan Manuel0
7405358109Romance del Rey moro que perdió la AlhamaAnónimo (1482, España)1
7405358110Soneto XXIII (En tanto que de rosa y azucena)Garcilaso de la Vega2
7405358111Segunda carta de relaciónHernán Cortés3
7405358112Visión de los vencidos (Los presagios y Se ha perdido el pueblo mexica)Miguel León Portilla, Fray Bernardo Sahagún, Diego Muñoz Camargo, un anónimo poeta nahua4
7405358113Soneto CLXVI (Mientras que por competir con tu cabello)Luis de Góngora5
7405358114Lazarillo de TormesAnónimo (1554, España)6
7405358115El ingenioso hidalgo, Don Quijote de la ManchaMiguel de Cervantes7
7405358116El burlador de Sevilla y el convidado de piedraGabriel Téllez (Tirso de Molina)8
7405358117Salmo XVII (Miré los muros de la patria mía)Francisco de Quevedo9
7405358118Hombres necios que acusáisSor Juana Inés de la Cruz10
7405358119En una tempestadJosé María Heredia11
7405358120Rima LIII (Volverán las oscuras golondrinas)Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer12
7405358121El hijoHoracio Quiroga13
7405358122Las medias rojasEmilia Bazán14
7405358123A RooseveltRubén Darío15
7405358124Nuestra AméricaJosé Martí16
7405358125Peso ancestralAlfonsina Storni17
7405358126San Manuel Bueno, mártirMiguel de Unamuno18
7405358127A Julia de BurgosJulia de Burgos19
7405358128Soledades II (He andado muchos caminos)Antonio Machado20
7405358129Walking AroundPablo Neruda21
7405358130Prendimiento de Antoñito el CamborioFederico García Lorca22
7405358131Balada de los dos abuelosNicolás Guillén23
7405358132La casa de Bernarda AlbaFederico García Lorca24
7405358133No oyes ladrar los perrosJuan Rulfo25
7405358134Chac MoolCarlos Fuentes26
7405358135El SurJorge Luis Borges27
7405358136Borges y yoJorge Luis Borges28
7405358137La noche boca arribaJulio Cortázar29
7405358138La siesta del martesGabriel García Márquez30
7405358139El ahogado más hermoso del mundoGabriel García Márquez31
7405358140Mi caballo magoSabine Ulibarrí32
7405358141Dos palabrasIsabel Allende33
7405358142...y no se lo tragó la tierra, La noche buenaTomás Rivera34
7405358143Mujer negraNancy Morejón35
7405358145El hombre que se convirtió en perroOsvaldo Dragún36
7405358146Como la vida mismaRosa Montero37

AP LITERATURE VOCAB SET 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
7942328625AbstractA term that is applied to ideas that are philosophical , not concrete or tangible example: love, good, evil, truth0
7942331357AllegoryA figure of speech in which abstract ideas and principles are described in terms of characters, figures, and events; each aspect of the story has a symbolic meaning outside itself examples: animal farm, Alice in Wonderland, Chronicles of Narnia1
7942343855Alliterationthe occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. examples: But a better butter makes a batter better2
7942345320AnachronismAn error of chronology or timeline in a literary piece "Brutus: Peace! Count the clock. Cassius: The clock has stricken three." The time this play depicts is a point in history dating back to 44 AD. Mechanical clocks referred to in the above-mentioned dialogue had not been invented at that time but were present in Shakespeare's time. Thus, the mention of a clock in this play is an anachronism.3
7942351868AllusionA brief and indirect reference toa person, plce, thing or idea of hisorical, cultural, literary or political significance4
7942353993Accentin prosody, a rhythmically significant stress on the syllables of a verse, usually at regular intervals.5
7942435794Analogya comparison between two things, typically for the purpose of explanation or clarification. "They crowded very close about him, with their hands always on him in a careful, caressing grip, as though all the while feeling him to make sure he was there. It was like men handling a fish which is still alive and may jump back into the water." the people are taking a prisoner to the gallows to be hanged. They are holding him firmly as if he were a fish which might slip and escape.6
7942453674Antecedentthe word, phrase, or clause to which a pronoun refers7
7942455496Aesthetic1. Concerned with beauty or the appreciation of beauty. 2. Of pleasing appearance. the philosophical theory or set of principles governing the idea of beauty at a given time and place: the clean lines, bare surfaces, and sense of space that bespeak the machine-age aesthetic; the Cubist aesthetic.8
7942461766Anecdotea short and amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person;9
7942465653Asidea line spoken by an actor to the audience but not intended for others on the stage example: Ferris Bueller's Day off10
7942468493ApostropheA figure of speech in which an absent person or personified object is addressed by a speaker; Addressing something nonhuman as if it were human Example: Death, be not proud . . . A rhetorical term for breaking off discourse to address some absent person or thing.11
7942478303ArchaismThe use of deliberately old-fashioned language.; intentional use of a word or expression no longer in general use to evoke a sense of a bygone era12
7942488829AnticlimaxOccurs when an action produces far smaller results than one had been led to expect.; An often disappointing, sudden end to an intense situation.13
7942490916AssonanceRepetition of a vowel sound within two or more words in close proximity14
7942493540Antiheroa central character in a story, movie, or drama who lacks conventional heroic attributes. a protagonist who lacks the characteristics that would make him a hero (or her a heroine) examples: deadpool, dexter, katniss everdeen?15
7942496704AphorismA brief, cleverly worded statement that makes a wise observation about life. ex:"If it ain't broke don't fix it"16
7942501452Anthropomorphisma technique in which a writer ascribes human traits, ambitions, emotions or entire behavior to animals, non-human beings, natural phenomena or objects. Personification is an act of giving human characteristics to animals or objects to create imagery, while anthropomorphism aims to make an animal or object behave and appear like they are human beings. ex: Pinocchio , Animal Farm17
7942506454Atmospheretype of feeling that readers get from a narrative, based on details such as setting, background, objects, and foreshadowing. A mood can serve as a vehicle for establishing atmosphere. In literary works, atmosphere refers to emotions or feelings an author conveys to his readers through description of objects and settings, such as in J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter tales, in which she spins a whimsical and enthralling atmosphere. atmosphere is a broader term, and may be set by a certain venue, such as a theater.18
7942513393Aspecta particular part or feature of something; A way in which something can be viewed by the mind: looked at all aspects of the situation. b. A characteristic or feature of something: a novel with many unusual aspects. 2. A particular look or facial expression; mien: "He was serious of aspect but wholly undistinguished" (Louis Auchincloss).19
7942516624Blank VersePoetry written in unrhymed (and USUALLY in) iambic pentameter20
7942520472BombasticPompous or overblown in language; full of high-sounding words intended to conceal a lack of ideas Using inflated language, pompous/ pretentious21
7942523442Cacophonyterm refers to the use of words with sharp, harsh, hissing and unmelodious sounds primarily those of consonants to achieve desired results. examples: Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travel": "And being no stranger to the art of war, I have him a description of cannons, culverins, muskets, carabines, pistols, bullets, powder, swords, bayonets, battles, sieges, retreats, attacks, undermines, countermines, bombardments, sea-fights..." In order to describe the destructive consequences of war, the writer chooses words and arranges them in an order that they produce an effect that is unmelodious, harsh and jarring that corresponds with the subject matter.22
7942529752Conceita fanciful expression in writing or speech; an elaborate metaphor readers definitely be surprised to hear someone comparing "two lovers with the two legs of a draftsman's compass." Thus, conceit examples have a surprising or shocking effect on the readers because they are novel comparisons unlike the conventional comparisons made in similes and metaphors. "Thou counterfeit'st a bark, a sea, a wind; For still thy eyes, which I may call the sea, Do ebb and flow with tears; the bark thy body is, Sailing in this salt flood; the winds, thy sighs; Who, raging with thy tears, and they with them, Without a sudden calm, will overset Thy tempest-tossed body." He compares Juliet to a boat in a storm. The comparison is an extended metaphor where he compares her eyes to a sea, her tears to a storm, her sighs to the stormy winds and her body to a boat in a storm.23
7942539108Consonancethe repetition of consonants (or consonant patterns) especially at the ends of words; the recurrence of similar sounds, especially consonants, in close proximity24
7942540790CoupletTwo consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme ;A pair of rhymed lines that may or may not constitute a separate stanza in a poem.25
7942543469CaesuraA natural pause or break in a line of poetry, usually near the middle of the line.; a break or pause (usually for sense) in the middle of a verse line26
7942545870CatharsisA cleansing of the spirity brought about by the pity and terror of a dramatic tragedy ; In literature it is used for the cleansing of emotions of the characters. It can also be any other radical change that leads to emotional rejuvenation of a person.27
7942568167ConflictA struggle between opposing forces; An internal or psychological conflict arises as soon as a character experiences two opposite emotions or desires; External conflict, on the other hand, is marked by a characteristic involvement of an action wherein a character finds himself in struggle with those outside forces that hamper his progress.28
7942575768ConventionLiterary conventions are defining features of particular literary genres, such as novel, short story, ballad, sonnet, and play.; A characteristic of a literary genre (often unrealistic) that is understood and accepted by audiences because it has come, through usage and time, to be recognized as a familiar technique. For example, the division of a play into acts and scenes is a dramatic convention, as are soliloquies and asides. flashbacks and foreshadowing are examples of literary conventions.29

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