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Romeo and Juliet Literary Terms
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Irony The difference between what we expect to happen and what actually happens.
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Foreshadowing Hints about future plot twists.
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Iambic Pentameter Lines of poetry that have 5 unstressed syllables, each followed by a stressed syllable.
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Blank Verse A form of poetry that uses unrhymed lines; it comes nearest to the natural rhythms of English.
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Aside A character’s remark either to the audience or another character that others on stage are not supposed to hear.
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Soliloquy A speech that a character gives when he/she is alone on stage, to let the audience know what he/she (the character) is thinking.
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Dramatic Conventions When the audience accepts something as realistic even though they know it to be false or untrue.
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Foil A character whose personality or attitudes are in sharp contrast to those of another character; this highlights the other character’s traits or attitude.
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Allusion Brief reference, in a work, to something outside the work that the reader or audience is expected to know.
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Comic Relief A humorous scene, incident, or speech that relieves the overall emotional intensity.
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Tragic Hero Usually someone who is nobly born and who may have great influence in his/her society. They also have one or more major character flaws.
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Tragedy A drama that ends in catastrophe (it recounts events in the life of a person of significance).
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Hyperbole A figure of speech in which the truth is exaggerated for emphasis or for humorous effect.
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Epic simile A long, elaborate comparison that continues for a number of lines.
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Extended metaphor a metaphor that continues for a number of lines in a literary work
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Paradox A statement that seems to contradict itself but is, nevertheless, true.
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Pun A joke that comes from a play on words.
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Oxymoron A form of paradox that combines a pair of opposite terms into a single, unusual expression.
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Apostrophe A form of personification in which the absent, or dead, are spoken to as if present.
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