AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

AP Language Rhetorical Terms Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
4429627744Active Voicedescribes a sentence where the subject performs the action stated by the verb0
4429637389Allusionan indirect reference to something1
4429645226Anecdotea short story used to illustrate a claim2
4429660268Antecedenta thing or event that existed before or logically precedes another3
4429668860ApostropheA writer or a speaker, using an (_________), detaches himself from the reality and addresses an imaginary character in his speech.4
4429682169Dictionspeakers choice of words5
4429694591Colloquialthe use of informal words, phrases or even slang in a piece of writing6
4431464627Connotationmeaning of a word to the readers beyond its definition7
4431468991Denotationthe actual meaning of a word, other than what feelings toward the word may suggest8
4431471221Jargonthe words used by a group of similar practices9
4431474949Vernaculardaily language or common diction10
4431483059Didacticsomeone who preaches or is moralistic11
4431485056Aphorism (or Adage)a statement of truth or opinion expressed in a concise and witty manner12
4431487884Allegorystory, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning13
4434772356Ellipsisthe appropriate omission of words that are mutually understood and thus unnecessary14
4434784683Euphemisma mild or indirect word substituted for one that is harsh or inappropriate15
4434845875Figurative Languageuses words or expressions with a meaning that is different from the literal interpretation16
4434845876Analogya comparison in which an idea or a thing is compared to another thing that is quite different from it17
4434851944Hyperboleexaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally18
4434871091Idioma word or phrase that is not taken literally19
4434876565Metaphorthe comparison of one thing to another without the use of like or as20
4434891688Metonymya word or phrase that is used to stand in for another word21
4434915280Synecdochea figure of speech in which a part is made to represent the whole or vice versa22
4434919906Similea figure of speech that directly compares two things using like or as23
4434942087Synesthesiafigure of speech where one sense is described in terms of another24
4434944382Personificationa figure of speech where human qualities are given to animals, objects or ideas25
4434946290Genrea category of literary composition26
4434949434Imageryto use figurative language to represent objects, actions and ideas27
4434963398Invectivespeech or writing that attacks, insults, or denounces a person, topic, or institution28
4434974665Juxtapositiontwo things being seen or placed close together with contrasting effect29
4435009697Moodthe emotional feeling or atmosphere that a work of literature produces in a reader30
4435034673Motifany recurring element that has symbolic significance in a story31
4435034674Oxymoronfigure of speech in which incongruous or seemingly contradictory terms appear side by side32
4435053138Pacinga stylistic device , which shows how fast a story unfolds33
4435055144Paradoxa statement that contradicts itself, or that must be both true and untrue at the same time34
4440139709Parallelisma similarity in the syntactical structure of a set of words in successive phrases35
4440143159Anaphoraa word or group of words is repeated at the beginning of two or more successive clauses or sentences36
4440145745Antithesisa literary device used to put two contrasting ideas together37
4440153391Chiasmusdevice in which a sentence or phrase is followed by a sentence or phrase that reverses the structure and order of the first sentence38
4440157093Epistrophethe repetition of a word at the end of successive clauses or sentences39
4440161730Zeugmaa figure of speech in which a word applies to two others in different senses40
4440169030Parenthetical Ideaan explanatory or qualifying word, clause, or sentence inserted into a passage41
4440173718Parodyan imitation of the style of a particular writer with deliberate exaggeration for comic effect42
4440178363Personathe aspect of someones character that is presented or perceived by others43
4440180218Alliterationthe occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of words44
4440183783Assonancethe repetition of the sound of a vowel45
4440185558Onomatopoeiathe formation of a word associated with what is named "BOOM" "POW"46
4440190699Periphrasisthe use of indirect and circulatory speech or writing47
4440194270Polysyndetonwhen conjunctions are used repeatedly in quick succession48
4440196575Asyndetonthe omission of absence of a conjunction between part of a sentence49
4440199986Punthe mistaken use of a word in place of a similar sounding one50
4440206575Rhetoricthe art of effective or persuasive speaking or writing51
4440210526Aristotelian Triangleethos, pathos, logos, appealing to logic, emotion, and credibility52
4440212859Rhetorical Questiona question you ask without expecting an answer53
4440217205Satirethe use of humor,irony, and exaggeration to expose stupidity54
4440222970Appositivenoun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it55
4440224955Independent Clausea group of words that contain a subject and verb and express a complete thought56
4440227487Subordinate Clausetypically introduced by a conjunction that forms part of and is dependent on a main clause57
4440233195Compound Sentencehas two independent clauses58
4440235238Complex Sentencecontains an independent clause and at least one dependent clause59
4440241151Loose Sentencea type of sentence in which the main idea is elaborated by the previous modifying clauses60
4440252712Periodic Sentencethe main clause or predicate is at the end of the sentence61
4440254108Symbolwhen an object, person, or situation has another meaning than its literal62
4440257285Syntaxthe arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed sentences63
4440259637Themethe subject of a talk, a piece of writing, thoughts, or an exhibition64
4440262535Thesisa statement of theory that is put toward as a premise to be maintained65
4440264766Tonethe general character or attitude of a place or piece of writing66
4440267222Litotesthe presentation of something as being smaller than actual67

AP Literature Final Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6491122893HephaestusGod of metallurgy/blacksmith; husband to Aphrodite. Set trap for Ares and Aphrodite to catch them in the act0
6491176546DaedalusCraftsman, creator of the wax wings for son Icarus1
6491202744NarcissusCursed to fall in love with his own reflection when he cast away Echo2
6491223003PandoraPandora's box3
6491224517MedusaHera turned her into snake head woman4
6491226914AtalantaVirgin huntress that was abandoned in mountains by father5
6491240929HelenDaughter of Zeus and Leda, most beautiful woman in the world. Trojan war6
6491249606PygmalionArtist, creates woman statue and falls in love with her7
6491257369OrpheusHero with super music skills8
6491264376PerseusSon of Zeus, on a mission to save mother9

E-words AP LITERATURE Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
4202959739Elegya poem of serious reflection, typically a lament for the dead.0
4202959740epicA long narrative poem, written in heightened language, which recounts the deeds of a heroic character who embodies the values of a particular society1
4202961770enjambmentA line having no pause or end punctuation but having uninterrupted grammatical meaning continuing into the next line.2
4202961771epigramA brief witty poem, often satirical.3
4202962999euphonypleasant, harmonious sound4
4202963000expositionBackground information presented in a literary work.5
4202965248epistle/ epistolarya letter concerned with letters; through correspondence6
4202965249elisionThe omission of an unstressed vowel or syllable to preserve the meter of a line of poetry.7
4202967292elementsBasic techniques of each genre of literature8
4202967293epitaphA brief statement written on a tomb or gravestone9
4202968345euphemismAn indirect, less offensive way of saying something that is considered unpleasant10
4202986745explicitDefinite, clearly stated11

Myers for AP Psychology Unit 7B: THINKING & LANGUAGE Flashcards

Thinking Problem Solving Creativity and Language

Terms : Hide Images
3941375792cognitionall the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating.0
3941375793Concepta mental grouping of similar objects, events, ideas, or people1
3941375794Prototypea standard or typical example (Is that a computer screen that BENDS?!)2
3941375795algorithma precise rule (or set of rules) specifying how to solve some problem3
3941375796Heuristica commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem4
3941375797InsightA cognitive form of learning involving the mental rearragnment or restructuring of the elements in a problem to achieve an understanding or the problem and arrive at a solution5
3941375798Creativitythe ability to produce novel and valuable ideas6
3941375799Confirmation biasa tendency to search for information that confirms one's preconceptions7
3941375800fixationthe inability to see a problem from a new perspective, by employing a different mental set8
3941375801Mental Seta tendency to approach a problem in a particular way, often a way that has been successful in the past9
3941375802Functional fixednessthe tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions; an impediment to problem solving (Is a shoe just a shoe?)10
3941375803Representative heuristicjudging the likelihood of things in terms of how well they seem to represent, or match, particular prototypes; may lead one to ignore other relevent information11
3941375804Availability heuristicestimating the likelihood of events based on their availability in memory; if instances come readily to mind, we presume such events are common12
3941375805Overconfidencetotal certainty or greater certainty than circumstances warrant13
3941375806Belief Perseveranceclinging to one's initial conceptions after the basis on which they were formed has been discredited14
3941375807Intuitioninstinctive knowing (without the use of rational processes)15
3941375808Framingformulation of the plans and important details16
3941375809Languagethe mental faculty or power of vocal communication17
3941375810Phoneme(linguistics) one of a small set of speech sounds that are distinguished by the speakers of a particular language18
3941375811Morphememinimal meaningful language unit19
3941375812Grammarstudies of the formation of basic linguistic units20
3941375813Semanticsthe study of language meaning21
3941375814Syntaxthe grammatical arrangement of words in sentences22
3941375815Babbling Stagebeginning at about 4 months, the stage of speech development in which the infant spontaneously utters various sounds at first unrelated to the household lanuage.23
3941375816One-word Stagethe stage in speech development, from about age 1 to 2, during which a child speaks mostly in single words24
3941375817Two-word stagebeginning about age 2, the stage in speech development during which a child speaks mostly two-word statements25
3941375818Telegraphic speechearly speech stage in which a child speaks like a telegram--'go car'--using mostly nouns and verbs and omitting 'auxiliary' words26
3941375819Linguistic determinismWhorf's hypothesis that language determines the way we think27
3941375820Noam ChomskyUnited States linguist whose theory of generative grammar redefined the field of linguistics (born 1928)28
3941375821B.F Skinnerpioneer of operant conditioning who believed that language development is determined by our past history of rewards and punishments29
3941375822Benjamin WhorfConcept of "liguistic determinism" or how language impacts thought30

History of Pakistan Midterm Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5156331472Orientalismstudy of eastern languages and literature; became associated with Imperialism and received a negative connotation0
5156334781Afghanianame of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa North-West province of Pakistan1
5156337262NWFPNorth West Frontier Province2
5156337264KPKsame region as NWFP3
5160233967Punjab (Chandigarh), Sindh (Karachi), Balochistan (Quetta), NWFP (Peshawar District)4 Provinces and their Capitals4
5156343665Tribal Agencies (FATA)federally appointed agents that oversee/arbitrate based on the Frontier Crimes Regulations (tribal law)5
5160241075Azad Kashmirdisputed region; India-Pakistan line of control; self-governing administrative region of Pakistan; referred to as the "Pakistan-administered Kashmir" by the UN6
5156351783Northern Areas (Gilgit-Baltistan)also part of the disputed region between India and Pakistan, and China7
5156354304National LanguageUrdu, only 10% of the population speaks it8
5156356607Official LanguagesEnglish and Urdu9
5156356608Peshawar, Kohat, Bannu, Laki, Marwat, TankFrontier Regions10
5160045175Punjabi, Pashto, Sindhi, Balochi, Persian5 other major Languages of Pakistan11
5156359298Umayyads2nd caliphate after Muhammad; capital was Damascus from 661-74412
5156362217Muhammad b. Qasim695-715; Umayyad Caliphate who conquered Sindh and Multan- allowed for greater expansion later on13
5156367387Abbasidsfollowed the Umayyad Caliphate; based in Baghad; overthrew by the slave guards who took overe the palace and allowed certain portions of the Empire to go independent; Caliph was still "in power" because the guards couldn't rule without legitimacy- developed their own basis of power14
5156369524SamanidsSunni Persian 839-999; they were derived from the slave guards that broke away from the Abbasids; settled in Balkh, Persia; expanded into Central Asia and some of their slave guards declared themselves independent and moved further east, creating new groups15
5156371226GhaznavidsModern day Afghanistan, 962-1186; replaced the Samanids16
5156375137Ghurdsreplaced the Ghaznavids in 1186; ruled in Delhi17
5156377949Sultanates of Delhistopped ruling in the name of the Abbasid King and instead ruled autonomously, they had no religious authority; they were very successful, relatively stable, developed great wealth, and were patrons of the art18
5156381991Lodhis5th Sultanate of Delhi; 1451-1526;19
5160109409Slave Dynasty1st Sultanate of Delhi; 1206-129020
5160056026Khaljis2nd Sultanate of Delhi; 1290-1320; Ala al-Din Khalji: tried to keep the cost of living low so the wages of soldiers could be low21
5160056027Tughlugs3rd Sultanate of Delhi; 1320-1414;22
5160058467Sayyids4th Sultanate of Delhi; 1414-1451;23
5156390021Mughalsdescendants of Chinghiz Khan and Timur Lang; ruled the Indian subcontinent from 1526-185724
5156398123BaburRuler of Kabul & Ghazni; conquered Delhi25
5160005115Akbar1556-1605; East India Company grew; achieved religious and political peace26
5160007242Jahangir1605-1627; East India Company was granted exclusive trading rights27
5160009523Shah Jahan1592-1666; wanted to expand the empire- greatly expanded the military; built the Taj Mahal28
5160011780Aurangzeb1618-1707; religiously conservative, overturned a lot of Akbar's reforms; tried very hard to annex Decca29
5156400259Sufismystical Islam30
5156402819SuhrawardisSufi- sect; austere relative to other orders; very neo-platonic (the notion of the oneness of all beings); intolerant of Buddhists and Hindus; Similar to Hinduism which caused controversy; accepted the unity of all exists; spread to South Asia post 125831
5156402821ChishtisSufi-sect; ecstatic, experimental; harmonize Islam and Indian culture; most popular in India by the 18th century32
5156405097QadirisSufi-sect; named for Abd al-Qadir Gilani; more Sharia minded33
5156407715NaqshbandisSufi-sect; late 14th century originating in Bukhara and having greater popularity in urban areas; 17th century reformer Sirhindi- operated during colonialism, associated with militant anti-colonialism; examined their religion because they thought they were being punished with colonialism34
5156414052East India Companyjoint stock company seeking trade with the East Indies; ruled India with private armies; grew under Akbar, granted exclusive rights under Jahangir;35
5156416119Battle of Plassey1757; victory of the EIC over Bengal; Bengali Nawabs (Muslims) took British people hostage (Black Hole of Calcutta), British aligned with the Nawab's rival; EIC took control of Bengal during this timel36
5156418222Black Hole of CalcuttaBritish POW's were held hostage and died in a dungeon in Calcutta37
5156422751Indian Rebellion of 1857-Sepoy Rebellionrebellion of 1857; preceeded by several rebellions; began when new cartridges were introduced into the military that were rumored to contain pig and cow fat as the grease → the practice was to bite the cartridge to prepare it but consuming pig and cow violated Muslim and Hindu religious laws (respectively) → pushed the Hindus and Muslims to fight together against the British; British made an example out of them so that no one would try to rebel again38
5156424709Chaudry Rahmat Alione of the earliest proponents for the creation of an independent Pakistan39
5156424710Farangi Mahallocation of the first Dar-I Nizami- the first curriculum of Islam40
5156427199Shah Wali Allah of Delhi:Sought to make the Mughals great again and to bring back to the authority of the Mughal Empire by reforming and strengthening the Islamic education; main reforms included pushing back against the approach to the world view that had become dominant in the South Asian context whereby whatever happens is what God wills → strongly believed that God knew everything and could not be surprised therefore your actions in life were already known in God's eyes → wanted to stop this thought to stop South Asians from sitting back and watching God's plan unfold- wanted them to take actions, stop being so passive- the future is not entirely written41
5156429275Sayyid Ahmad Barelvi:died 1831; continued Shah Wali Allah's ideas; first to go on record calling for a military jihad- issued it on the grounds that the British were invaders and therefore the task had fallen to the people to defend themselves (Rules of Jihad: There is an individual obligation in which everyone is responsible for, such as praying, upholding the pillars of Islam. There is also a collective obligation that befall the entire community to make sure that everything is done, that there are enough teachers, builders, bakers, etc. to sustain the community. Defense against invaders is a collective obligation, but if there are not enough soldiers it becomes an individual obligation where every able bodied person is expected to serve)42
5156430944Ahli-I Hadithconservative religious movement founded by Sayyid Nazeer Hussein that rejects Islam's folk practices in India and encourages going back to the Quran and Hadith- the Hadith was especially important because it could be translated during the period when the Quran was not allowed to be translated out of Arabic43
5156433130Delhi CollegeCollege founded by Ghaziuddin Khan, a general of Aurangzeb44
5156435904Dar al-Ulum/DeobandIslamic learning center created by the Muslims to save the Indian culture from British enslavement45
5156438336S. Sayyid Ahmad KhanKnighted founder of the Aligarh Muslim University founded in 1875. The university had the support of the British which made his efforts to teach a modern English curriculum successful. He wanted to make Muslims competitive citizens, but this pitted the attendees of the University against the traditional anti-British population46
5156441430Congress Partypolitical party founded in 1885 by Hindus, Muslims, and the British. They wanted the right to self-rule and to be more of a commonwealth than an occupied territory. It contributed to the rise of Indian nationalism through its combined communal identities formed by members.47
5156443795Partition of BengalThe first partition of India and occurred in 1905 under the Viceroy Lord Curson. Triggered by the formation of the Congress Party, which joined the Muslims and the Hindus. In an attempt to weaken the party, the British convinced the Muslims that they would be grateful for the British giving them independence and empowering them against the majority of the Hindus. Their plan worked and the Muslims supported the partition of Bengal and it pitted the Hindus against the Muslims.48
5156447016All India Muslim LeagueA political party formed in 1906 in Bengal with the intention to protect the political rights of Muslims in India. They boycotted British goods and were vital to the Pakistan State movement49
5156449742Morely-Minto ReformsIn 1909, the British relented (somewhat) and allowed Indians to be elected to the provincial governments they had set up. In this process they made the Muslims a separate electorate and had their votes counted twice, the Muslims who were only ¼ of the population suddenly had ½ of the votes thus upsetting the other communities. The British did this to garner Muslim support for British rule over India.50
5156451983Defense of India Act (1915)emergency criminal law enacted by the Governor-General of India with the intention of curtailing the nationalist and revolutionary activities during and in the aftermath of the First World War51
5156454135Government of India Act (1935)This was the last constitution of British India that reorganized the provinces and princely states, allowed more direct elections to the provincial ruling bodies (however they had no power outside of the province). In the National Election of 1937 they didn't include Muslims in the ministries, which played into the fears of the Muslim population about being marginalized and outnumbered by the Hindus. This was in place until 194752
5156456186Lahore ResolutionIn 1940, Jinnah announced this. The Muslim League specifies where Pakistan will be (geographical units in which Muslims were the majority) and declared that these would autonomous states BUT there is no mention about an independent India or any mention of the British. The Religious authorities were opposed. The driving force for the movement came from North India NOT the region that would make-up Pakistan.53
5156458574Simla ConferenceThis conference occurred in 1945. Here the Viceroy suggested a long for separate representation for Muslims54
5156460542Muhammad Ali JinnahLeader of the All Muslim League from 1913 until 1947, the creation of Pakistan. He is credited with being the founder of Pakistan, where he served as its first Governor General.55
5156460543Waqfendowment made by a Muslim to a religious, educational, or charitable cause56
5156463163Dars-I nizamifirst curriculum of Islam, founded in the Farangi Mahal57
5156465780IjtihadIslamic legal term referring to independent reasoning or the thorough exertion of a jurist's mental faculty in finding a solution to a legal question58
5156468368MadhhabsimSchool of thought within Islamic jurisprudence59
5156470611NawabMuslim governor/individual with high status60
5156470612Rajanon Muslims61
5156472598Zamindarlandowner, especially one who leases his land to tenant farmers62
5156474931Nehruthe first Prime Minister of India63
5156477215Gandhiled the peaceful movement for Indian independence from the British. However, he broke ranks with Jinnah and the Muslim community because he focused on the secular not the religious. Also, people believed that he was favoring the Hindu community and Jinnah accused him and Congress of trying to "Hinduize politics". Additionally, he wanted one India while Jinnah wanted separate states.64
5156477216Khilafat Movement1919-1922 was led by the Ali brothers to protect the religious successor to Muhammad after the Ottomans had been defeated. Congress and Gandhi both supported the movement but increasing tensions between Muslims and Hindus weakened the movement. The Ali brothers were accused of corruption, which also weakened the movement.65
5156484275Jamaati-I IslamiIslamic political organization and social conservative movement founded in 1941 in British India by the Islamist theologian and philosopher Abul ala Maududi66
5156486489Muhammad IqbalHe is credited with inspiring the Pakistan Movement and presented the idea of a separate state of Pakistan within or without British India, he didn't care if it was in British India or not, as long as they were independent. It was an idealistic approach to reality. He was a philosopher, poet in the line of Shah Wali Allah. He believed in strengthening society by strengthening the individual and strengthening the law and is called the "Father of Pakistan67
5156489171Durand LineIn 1893 the Line was established by the British and formed the boarder between Pakistan and Afghanistan (it used to be between India and Afghanistan). It is not recognized now but Afghanistan used to recognize it to keep the British from invading. However, it was a very permeable border because its 1500 miles long and in the mountains and desert- areas that cannot be fully guarded68

AP English Literature and Composition Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
2921434223Abstract LanguageLanguage describing ideas and qualities rather than observable or specific things, people, or places. The observable or "physical" is usually described in concrete language.0
2921442802AllegoryA narrative or description having a second meaning beneath the surface one. A story, fictional or nonfictional, in which characters, things, and events represent qualities or concepts. The interaction of these characters, things, events is meant to reveal an abstraction or a truth. These characters, etc. may be symbolic of the ideas referred to.1
2921445367AlliterationThe repetition at close intervals of initial and identical consonant sounds.2
2921448310AnachronismAssignment of something to a time when it was not in existence, e.g. a cell phone used by a Biblical figure.3
2921452487AnalogyAn analogy is a comparison to a directly parallel case. When a writer uses an analogy, he or she argues that a claim reasonable for one case is reasonable for the analogous case.4
2921455413AllusionAn indirect reference to something (usually a literary text) with which the reader is expected to be familiar. Allusions are usually literary, historical, Biblical, or mythological.5
2921456828AmbiguityAn event or situation that may be interpreted in more than one way. Also, the manner of expression of such an event or situation may be ambiguous. Artful language may be ambiguous. Unintentional ambiguity is usually vagueness.6
2921459074AnecdoteA brief recounting of a relevant episode. Anecdotes are often inserted into fictional or nonfiction texts as a way of developing a point or injecting humor.7
2921460154ApostropheAn address to the dead as if living; to the inanimate as if animate; to the absent as if present; to the unborn as if alive. Examples: "O Julius Caesar thou are mighty yet; thy spirit walks abroad," or "Roll on, thou deep and dark blue ocean, roll."8
2921462695ArchetypeRecurrent designs, patters of action, character types, themes, or images which are identifiable in a wide range of literature; for instance, the femme fatale, that female character who is found throughout literature as the one responsible for the downfall of a significant male character.9
2921464725AsideA dramatic convention by which an actor directly addresses the audience but it is not supposed to be heard by the other actors on the stage.10
2921468005AssonanceA repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds, usually those found in stressed syllables of close proximity. Samuel T. Coleridge used assonance when he wrote, "In Xanadu did Kubla Kahn.11
2921472197AttitudeThe sense expressed by the tone of voice and/or the mood of a piece of writing; the feelings the author holds towards his subject, the people in his narrative, the events, the setting or even the theme. It might even be the feeling he holds for the reader. In AP English exams, students are often asked to respond to the attitude of the writer, speaker, or narrator towards some aspect within the piece of writing that is being presented.12
2921475384BalladA narrative poem that is, or originally was, meant to be sung. Repetition and refrain (recurring phrase or phrases) characterize the ballad.13
2921479554Blank VerseThe verse form that most resembles common speech, blank verse consists of unrhymed lines in iambic pentameter. Many of Shakespeare's plays are in blank verse.14
2921483503CaesuraA pause in a line of verse, indicated by natural speech patterns rather than due to specific metrical patterns. Pope was able to keep his heroic couplets interesting by varying the position of the caesurae, as here: Alas how changed! // What sudden horrors rise! A naked lover // bound and bleeding lies! Where, where was Eloise? // Her voice, her hand, Her poniard, // had opposed the dire command.15
2921486586CaricatureA depiction in which a character's characteristics or features are so deliberately exaggerated as to render them absurd. Political cartoons use visual caricature; writers, such as Charles Dickens, create verbal caricature—this can be found both in drawing and in print in The Pickwick Papers.16
2921489098ColloquialOrdinary language, the local vernacular. For example, in some part of the US soda maybe referred to as "pop."17
2921490993Comic ReliefHumorous speeches and incidents in the course of the serious action of a tragedy; frequently comic relief widens and enriches the tragic significance of the work.18
2921493317Concrete LanguageLanguage that describes specific, observable things, people or places, rather than ideas or qualities.19
2921495997ConnotationRather than the dictionary definition (which is denotation), connotation is the associations implied by a word; implied meaning (connotation) rather than literal meaning (denotation).20
2921497326ConsonanceRepetition of a consonant sound within two or more words in close proximity.21
2921499489DialectThe language and speech idiosyncrasies of a specific area, region, or group of people.22
2921501805DictionWord choice, particularly as an element of style, used to persuade or convey tone, purpose, or effect. Different types and arrangements of words have significant effects on meaning. An essay written in academic diction, for example, would be much less colorful, but perhaps more precise, than street slang.23
2921504660DidacticA term used to describe fiction or nonfiction that teaches a specific lesson or moral or provides a model or correct behavior or thinking.24
2921505933ElegyA formal sustained poem lamenting the death of a particular person.25
2921507688EpigraphA quotation or aphorism at the beginning of a literary work suggestive of a theme. One found at the beginning of John Kennedy Toole's Confederacy of Dunces: "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign; that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him." —Jonathan Swift.26
2921509888EpiphanyA major character's moment of realization or awareness.27
2921511596EpithetA term used to characterize a person or thing, such as rosy-fingered in rosy-fingered dawn or the Great in Catherine the Great. Also a term used as a descriptive substitute for the name or title or a person, such as The Great Emancipator for Abraham Lincoln.28
2921516233ExpositionBackground information provided by a writer to enhance a reader's understanding of the context of a fictional or nonfictional story.29
2921517564EuphemismThe use of a word or phrase that is less direct, but is also considered less distasteful or less offensive than another. E.g. "He is at rest" instead of "He is dead." Also consider "Technicolor yawn" for "vomiting."30
2921519681FarceA play or scene in a play or book that is characterized by broad humor, wild antics, and often slapstick or physical humor.31
2921522607Figurative LanguageA word or words that are inaccurate literally, but describe by calling to mind sensations or responses that the thing described evokes. Figurative language may be in the form of metaphors or similes, both non-literal comparison. Shakespeare's "All the world's a stage" is an example of non-literal figurative language (metaphor specifically).32
2921524969Figure of SpeechA form of expression in which words are used out of the usual sense in order to make the meaning more specific33
2921526424Flat CharacterA character constructed around a single idea or quality; a flat character is immediately recognizable.34
2921530565FoilA character whose traits are the opposite of another and who thus points up the strengths and weaknesses of the other character.35
2921531997Formal DictionLanguage that is lofty, dignified, and impersonal. Such diction is often used in narrative epic poetry.36
2921532798GenreA literary form or type; classification. e.g. tragedy, comedy, novel, essay, poetry.37
2921534687HubrisOverwhelming pride or insolence that results in the misfortune of the protagonist of a tragedy. It is the particular form of tragic flaw that results from excessive pride, ambition, or overconfidence. The excessive pride of Macbeth is a standard example of hubris in English drama. Also spelled hybris.38
2921537053HyperboleConscious exaggeration used to heighten effect. Not intended literally, hyperbole is often humorous. Example: "And fired the shot heard round the world."39
2921540120IambicA metrical foot in poetry that consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable; often iambs are uses in sets of five called iambic pentameter. All of Shakespeare's sonnets are written in iambic pentameter.40
2921541846ImageryThe use of images, especially in a pattern of related images, often figurative, to create a strong unified sensory impression.41
2921544092Informal DictionLanguage that is not as lofty or impersonal as formal diction; similar to everyday speech, for example words such as OK, bye, hey.42
2921545009IronyGenerally speaking, a discrepancy between expectation and reality.43
2921546678Dramatic IronyWhen a reader is aware of a reality that differs from a character's perception of reality; the audience/reader is aware of information not provided to the character.44
2921550551Verbal IronyThe literal meaning of a writer's words may be different than the intention.45
2921552399MetaphorA comparison of two things, often unrelated. A figurative verbal equation results where both "parts" illuminate one another. Metaphors may occur: in a single sentence —"Talent is a cistern; genius is a fountain;" as a controlling image of an entire work —"Pilgrim at Sea by Par F. Lagerkvist; as obvious ("His fist was a knotty hammer.") or implied (But O beware the middle mind that purrs and never shows a tooth.").46
2921555018Dead MetaphorMetaphor--So overused that its original impact has been lost.47
2921557907Extended MetaphorMetaphor—One developed at length and involves several points of comparison.48
2921564940Mixed MetaphorMetaphor—When two metaphors are jumbled together, often illogically.49
2921566199Meterthe more or less regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry; this is determined by the kind of "foot" (i.e. iambic) and by the number of feet per line (i.e. pentameter).50
2921575555MoodAn atmosphere created by a writer's word choice (diction) and the details selected. Syntax is also a determiner of mood because sentence strength, length, and complexity affect pacing.51
2921577891MoralThe lesson drawn from a fictional or nonfictional story. A heavily didactic story.52
2921579078MotifA frequently recurrent character, incident, or concept in literature. For example, in The Great Gatsby, the recurring image, or motif, of the colors green, white, and gold.53
2921580285NovelAn extended piece of prose fiction.54
2921589433OnomatopoeiaThe use of a word whose pronunciation suggests its meaning. "Buzz," "hiss," "slam," and "pop" are commonly used examples.55
2921591144OxymoronA rhetorical antithesis. Juxtaposing two contradictory terms, like "wise fool" or "deafening silence."56
2921592206ParableA short story from which a lesson may be drawn.57
2921593909ParadoxA seemingly contradictory statement or situation which is actually true. This rhetorical device is often used for emphasis or simply to attract attention.58
2921595545ParallelismSentence construction which places in close proximity two or more equal grammatical constructions. Parallel structure may be as simple as listing two or three modifiers in a row to describe the same noun or verb; it may take the form of two or more of the same type of phrases (prepositional, participial, gerund, appositive) that modify the same noun or verb; it may also take the form of two or more subordinate clauses that modify the same noun or verb. Or, parallel structure may be a complex blend of single-word, phrase, and clause parallelism all in the same sentence.59
2921596813ParodyAn exaggerated imitation of a usually more serious work for humorous purposes. The writer of a parody uses the quirks of style of the imitated piece in extreme or ridiculous ways.60
2921598335PathosQualities of a fictional or nonfictional work that evoke sorrow or pity. Over-emotionalism can be the result of an excess of pathos.61
2921599426Periodic SentenceSentence that places the main idea or central complete thought at the end of the sentence, after all introductory elements—e.g. "Across the stream, beyond the clearing, from behind a fallen a tree, the lion emerged." Persona: A writer often adopts a fictional voice to tell a story. Persona or voice is usually determined by a combination of subject matter and audience. Nick Carraway in The Great Gatsby is such a persona.62
2921601210PersonificationFigurative Language in which inanimate objects, animals, ideas, or abstractions are endowed with human traits or human form—e.g. "When Duty whispers..."63
2921611646PlotSystem of actions represented in a dramatic or narrative work.64
2921613096Point of ViewThe perspective from which a fictional or nonfictional story is told. First-person, third-person, or third-person omniscient points of view are commonly used.65
2921614392PunA play on words that are identical or similar in sound but have sharply diverse meanings.66
2921616795RepetitionWord or phrase used two or more times in close proximity.67
2921621037RhetoricThe art of effective communication, especially persuasive discourse. Rhetoric focuses on the interrelationship of invention, arrangement, and style in order to create felicitous and appropriate discourse.68
2921623095Rhetorical QuestionA question asked for rhetorical effect to emphasize a point; no answer is expected.69
2921625743Round CharacterA character drawn with sufficient complexity to be able to surprise the reader without losing credibility.70
2921627339SarcasmA type of verbal irony in which, under the guise of praise, a caustic and bitter expression of strong and personal disapproval is given. Sarcasm is personal, jeering, and intended to hurt.71
2921629152SatireA work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of human behavior by portraying it in an extreme way. Satire doesn't simply abuse or get personal (as with sarcasm). Satire usually targets groups or large concepts rather than individuals; its purpose is customarily to inspire change.72
2921631318SettingLocale and period in which the action takes place.73
2921632321Situational IronyApplies to works which contain elaborate expressions of the ironic spirit. Also, irony applies to both Hamlet's situation and to his famous soliloquy, "To be or nor to be."74
2921635509SoliloquyWhen a character in a play speaks his thoughts aloud —usually by him or herself.75
2921636510Stock CharacterConventional character types that recur repeatedly in various literary genres. For example, the wicked stepmother or Prince Charming.76
2921639150Stream of ConsciousnessTechnique of writing that undertakes to reproduce the raw flow of consciousness, with the perceptions, thoughts, judgments, feelings, associations, and memories presented just as they occur without being tidied into grammatical sentences or given logical and narrative order.77
2921641956StyleThe choices in diction, tone, and syntax that a writer makes. In combination they create a work's manner of expression. Style is thought to be conscious and unconscious and may be altered to suit specific occasions. Style is often habitual and evolves over time.78
2921643506SymbolA thing, event, or person that represents or stands for some idea or event. Symbols also simultaneously retain their own literal meanings. A figure of speech in which a concrete object is used to stand for an abstract idea —e.g. the cross for Christianity79
2921645105SyntaxIn grammar, the arrangement of words as elements in a sentence to show their relationship.80
2921646595ThemeA central idea of a work of fiction or nonfiction revealed and developed in the course of a story or explored through argument.81
2921647947ToneA writer's attitude toward his or her subject matter revealed through diction, figurative language, and organization of the sentence and global levels. When identifying tone, an adjective must also preclude the word "tone."82
2921649054Tragic FlawTragic error in judgment; a mistaken act which changes the fortune of the tragic hero from happiness to misery; also known as hamartia.83
2921652474UnderstatementDeliberately representing something as much less than it really is. For example, "Last week I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much it altered her appearance." By Jonathan Swift.84

Quiz #2 AP Language Vocabulary Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
2890741032Conceitan elaborate comparison usually in the form of an extended metaphor or simple comparing things that are startlingly different0
2890757226style(1) an evaluation of the sum of the choices an author makes in blending diction, syntax, figurative language, and other literary decides (2) classification of authors to a group and comparison of an author to similar authors1
2890773370pedantica term used to describe literature that is "over-preachy" or 'over-teachy"2
2890776341hyperbolea figure of speech using deliberate exaggeration or overstatement3
2890779999mooddeals with verbal units and speakers attitude -indicative -subjunctive -imperative4
2890787267denotationactual dictionary definition or definition of a word5
2890790680non-sequitora statement that is not logically connected to each other6
2890795358cumulativea sentence which begins with the main idea and then expands on that idea with a series of details/particulars7
2890800598casual relationshipwhen a writer proves that one thing causes another as a part of his argument8
2890803016antecedentthe word, phrase, or clause referred to by a pronoun9
2890806115themethe major idea or ideas passed along by a piece of literature10

AP Language Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5495412404Pronoun /antecedentExample: Miguel gave her his love0
5495412405Helping verbsExample: Chris ran from his surgery1
5495412406Linking verbsHas, have, is, are, was, were, had2
5495412407Being verbsBe, have, may, can, shall, will, should, would3
5495412408Active voiceExample: Mrs. Whitmire through the desk across the room4
5495412409Passive voiceExample: The desk was thrown across the room5
5495412410Subject complementRenames or describes the subject6
5495412411Predicate adjectiveExample: Ashley was late7
5495412412Predicate nominativeExample: Mrs. Whitmire is a teacher8
5495412413VerbalA form of the verb that is used as a noun, adjective, or adverb9
5495412414ParticipleExample: Strolling shoppers fill the malls10
5495412415GerundExample: Reading is my favorite hobby Teaching is very rewarding11
5495412416InfinitiveExample: To hide To create To study12
5495412417AppositiveExample: John, my boyfriend, made me a sandwich13

ap language Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6390009373alliterationrepetition of the same sound begining several words0
6390009374allusionreference to a person or event or place1
6390009375anaphorarepetition of word or phrase st the beginning of clauses, phrases or lines2
6390009376antimetabolerepetition of words in reverse order3
6390009377periodic sentencesentence that's main clause is at the end4
6390009378personificationgiving an inanimate object human like characteristics5
6390009379rhetorical questiona question that doesn't require an answer6
6390009380syndochefigure of speech that used a part to represent a whole7
6390009381zeugmauses two words in a similar way that produces different meanings8
6390009382antithesisopposition of words in parallel construction9
6390009383archaic dictionold fashioned choice of words10
6390009384asynetonomission of conjunctions between phrases or words11
6390009385cumulative sentencesentence who's main idea is at the beginning then adds on12
6390009386polysyndetonexcessive use of conjunctions between words and phrases13
6390009387hortative senfdnvdsentence that urges someone to do something14
6390009388imperative sentencecommanding sentence15
6390009389inversioninverted order of words16
6390009390juxtapositionplacement of two things together to highlight similarities or difficulties17
6390009391metaphorfigure of speech that compares things without using like or as18
6390009392oxymoronparadox juxtaposition of words that contradict each other19
6390009393parallelismsimilar structure in a pair of related words, clauses and phrases20

AP Literature Exam Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5622444283allusionreference to person, place, thing, or another work0
5622444284antiheroordinary inglorious person1
5622444285climaxgreatest moment of tension2
5622444286complicationnew conflict3
5622444287cosmic ironyfate frustrates human efforts4
5622444288crisismoment of high tension5
5622444289denouementfinal resolution...6
5622444290dictionword choice7
5622444291dramatic situationperson involved in conflict8
5622444292epiphanymoment of discovery...character greatly altered9
5622444293expositionopening introductory portion of story10
5622444294fablebrief story that sets forth truth11
5622444295fairy talestory in magic/enchanted world12
5622444296fictionpartly imagined story13
5622444297flashbackretrospect14
5622444298herobrave central character15
5622444299in medias resin the midst of things16
5622444300interior monologuethoughts arranged as if they were speech17
5622444301ironic point of viewdistinction between narrator and author18
5622444302moralmessage or lesson19
5622451820motivationsufficient reason for characters' behavior20
5622454016naïve narratorcharacter who fails to understand implications21
5622456978narratorspeaker22
5622459374nonliterary fictionfiction as a commercial product formula23
5622471897omniscient narratorone who sees into the minds of characters24
5622475594plotevents in story25
5622475718point of viewidentification of, part played, and limits of the narrator26
5622482203sarcasmirony tinged with mockery27
5622483949scenevivid or dramatic moment28
5622486791science fictionscientific, realistic fantasy29
5622488613short storymodern, relatively realistic tale30
5622492365stream of consciousnessselective omniscience31
5622494975stylecharacteristics of a piece of writing32
5622499345suspensepleasurable anxiety33
5622501430taleshort story setting forth strange and wonderful events34
5622505430tall talefolk story; superhero story35
5622508412themegeneral idea36
5622514267tonereveals author's attitude37
5622517496unreliable narratorpoint of view of a character is deceptive38
5622528939verbal ironyspeaker's meaning is far from the usual meaning39
5622535468antithesiswords/phrases/clauses/sentences placed side by side in contrast40
5622543333balladnarrative song/poem, quatrains with scheme abcd41
5622548298cacophonyharsh, discordant sound or effect42
5622555872closed formform involving a pattern and lines that are regular and symmetrical43
5622559796coupletstanza, usually rhymed, of two lines of equal length44
5622566472didactic poempoem written to teach or state a message45
5622575084dramatic monologuepoem written as a speech at a revealing moment46
5622592852end rhymerhyme at ends of phrases47
5622595019epic poemlong narrative tracing adventured of hero48
5622598009epigramshort sententious statement49
5622600896euphonypleasing sound of words working together with meaning50
5622605062free versepoetry in open form51
5622609281mythstraditional stories of immortal beings52
5622613239open formpattern-less form with long and short lines and white space in which the poet seeks to discover a fresh and individual arrangement for words53
5622678365parallelpair of words/phrases/clauses/sentences placed side by side in agreement54
5622687188personafictitious character created by the poet55
5622690211poetic footbasic structure of poetic meter, usually 1 stressed and 1 or 2 unstressed syllables56
5622701717prosodystudy of metrical structures in poetry57
5622705646quatrainfour-line stanza, often with lines of varying length58
5622708416scansionart of indicating stresses and poetic feet in a poem59
5622711898tercetthree-line stanza that, if rhymed, keeps to one rhyme sound60
5625797421zeugmaone word used to modify two ("food for thought and also for vultures")61
5625804064asyndetonomission or absence of conjunction62
5625810243alliterationoccurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent words63
5625814351synecdochepart is made to represent the whole64
5625817363metonymyattribute is made to represent the object ("suit" for "businessman")65
5625824926litotesuse of double negatives to convey positive66
5636368358Arabystory from first-person POV; themes include alienation, loneliness, and maturity67
5636372888Story of an Hourstory about Louise Mallard and her husband "in the train wreck"; symbol of spring; theme is things aren't always what they seem68
5636379327Guests of a NationIrish war story; structure effective because it deceived reader, as at first you thought the relationship was a friendship, then led to challenging decision; theme duty>friendship69
5640121938Shilohstory about Leroy and Norma Jean; setting of war ground ironic; third person point-of-view; theme inability to cope, inability to be satisfied, reversal of gender roles70
5640146054A Rose for Emilyfirst person plural; theme disappearance of 'old south,' industrial progress; house symbol for isolation71
5640160922Astronomer's Wifemain characters: plumber, wife, astronomer; themes of contrast (up/down, dreamer/realist, asleep/awake)72
5734740223A&PStory of Sammy, who works in grocery store, and girls in bathing suits; themes include desire, appearances, principles(standing out), and mystery of others minds73
5745801497HyperboleExaggeration74
5745801498ApostropheSpeaker breaks off and addresses third party75
5745801499ImageAppeals to senses76
5745801500AssonanceRepetition of vowel sounds77
5745801501Blank verseVerse without rhyme78
5745801502EnjambmentContinuation of sentence without pause79
5745801503ParadoxSelf-contradictory80
5745801504ParodyHumorous imitation81
5745801505Slant rhymeImperfect rhyme82
5745801506SoliloquyMonologue where speaker speaks their mind83
5745801507ConnotationFeeling word invokes, and literal meaning84
5745801508DenotationLiteral meaning85

Pages

Subscribe to CourseNotes RSS

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!