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THIS IS
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With Host... Your
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100 200 300 400 500 Literary Terms NonfictionFictionDramaPoetryRhetoric
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Attitude of the author toward the reader, the people or events in a literary work A 100
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The writer’s or the speaker’s distinctive word choice A 200
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The perspective or vantage point where the story is limited to a single character A 300
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Ideas, customs, behaviors, or institutions are ridiculed for the purpose of improving society A 400
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Novel about the education and maturation of a young person A 500
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The audience for the Declaration of Sentiments B 100
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According to the Preamble, this is the purpose of the Constitution B 200
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DAILY DOUBLE C 400 DAILY DOUBLE Place A Wager
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According to Emerson, these are the TWO things that keep us from practicing “self-reliance” B 300
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The literary term demonstrated in the following quote: “we have remonstrated, we have petitioned, we have protested” B 400
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Name TWO of the aspects of either Literary Realism or Naturalism. You must choose one before responding. B 500
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C 100 The point of view of Huckleberry Finn
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Give TWO elements of Poe’s Playbook (author style) C 200
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Give THREE elements of American Gothic (literary formula/pattern) C 300
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DAILY DOUBLE C 400 DAILY DOUBLE Place A Wager
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The novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn juxtaposes TWO literary movements. Define juxtapose and then identify the two literary movements. C 400
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Identify the primary conflict and resolution of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn C 500
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“I say--I say--God is dead!” D 100
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“Let *you* beware, Mr. Danforth. Do you think yourself so mighty the Devil may not turn *your* wits?" D 200
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“The magistrate sits in your heart that judges you. I never thought you but a good man…” D 300
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“You must understand, sir, that a person is either with this court or he must be counted against it, there be no road between.” D 400
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This character clearly understands the underlying motives of the play: “private vengeance is working through this testimony” D 500
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The literary technique of listing E 100
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Repetition at the beginning of lines or phrases E 200
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The use of words where the intended meaning departs from the literal meaning; ex: metaphor E 300
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The intended effect of repetition E 400
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The intended impact of parallelism E 500
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The formation of mental pictures through descriptive language F 100
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The appeal to reason, often accomplished through facts and research F 200
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The appeal to emotion, often achieved through imagery and loaded language F 300
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The appeal to authority, often achieved by establishing credibility through position or by citing experts F 400
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Viewing multiple interpretations of rhetoric intensifies the impact of what persuasive appeal. EXPLAIN. F 500
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The Final Jeopardy Category is: America Please record your wager. This will be a turned in written response. Click on screen to begin
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Click on screen to continue Final Jeopardy: How is America defined through texts? Give one “American” quality or idea and give three examples of where that idea is present in our literature.
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Thank You for Playing Jeopardy! Game Designed By C. Harr-MAIT
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