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Literary Terminology Grade 9 Term Review
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Allusion
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A reference to a statement, person, place, event or thing that is known from another piece of lit, history, etc.
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Analogy
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analogy A parallel story used as an example
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antagonist
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Force or character versus the main character
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Characterization Direct Indirect
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Characterization The way the author creates and reveals the character.
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Direct and Indirect Characterization Direct—author gives character traits, tells reader what to think, etc. Indirect—author gives the character through appearance, dialogue, actions and thought
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Climax
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Highest emotional point for the main character (protagonist vs. antagonist)
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complication
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Obstacle to the solution of the conflict
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Conflict
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A struggle between opposing forces Person vs. person Person vs. nature Person vs. society Person vs. self Internal vs. external
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dialect
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A way of speaking characteristic of a particular region or group of people Grammar non-standard usage “That boy don’t never have no sense.” Pronunciation non- standard + or – of sounds stompin’ or idear
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Exposition
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Basic background information necessary to understand the story.
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Figurative Language
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Statements that compare unlike items
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hyperbole
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Extreme exaggeration I could eat a horse!
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metaphor
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Direct comparison of two things that are not alike Tom’s a bear before having his coffee. X=Y
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personification
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Personification Giving human characteristics to an inanimate object The willow danced in the wind.
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Simile
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Comparison of two things that are not alike that uses like or as The book is as old as dirt. She sings like a nightingale.
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flashback
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Flashback Tells what happened at an earlier time, breaks normal chronological order
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Foil
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Character in contrast to protagonist to illustrate hero’s temper, personality, etc.
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Foreshadowing
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Hints of events to come
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imagery
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Language that appeals to the senses Creates pictures for the reader
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Point of View
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Position from which a story is told First person Third person limited Third person omniscient
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Plot
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A Series of events that make up a story
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Précis
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A brief summary of a story
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Protagonist
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Main character, one who has the most to gain or lose
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Resolution/denouement
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Final part of the story, struggle is over, know the outcome, ties up lose ends Surprise ending – resolution comes from a climax but unexpected Indeterminate ending – resolution fails to fully tie up the situation
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Setting
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Time and place Time is often called the temporal setting
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Situational irony
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Situational Irony Contrast between what would seem appropriate and what really happens; sudden twist of fate, opposite and unexpected
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Suspense
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Arouses curiosity What will happen next? It keeps us turning the pages.
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symbolism
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Using one object as a symbol to stand for another.
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Title analysis
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Explaining the literal and figurative meaning of a phrase
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theme
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Main idea; general truth, author’s comment on life
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tone
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Author’s attitude toward the audience, subject, character. It is tied into the author’s purpose in writing and helps to establish that purpose.
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