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Published byElvin Glenn Modified over 9 years ago
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Literary Terms
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Atmosphere The mood or emotional qualities of the scene Example: A stormy night creates a creepy, scary atmosphere.
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Character Someone in the story The main character is sometimes also known as the protagonist.
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Characterization How the author reveals the character How you know whether or not to like the character The story details that let you judge the character
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Stages of a Story The typical process a story’s plot goes through as it progresses from beginning to end. Opening/Exposition Rising Action Climax Falling Action Resolution/Conclusion
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Foreshadowing Clues or hints at what’s to come Example: The character may have a dream that someone dies. Later in the story, another character is killed.
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Hyperbole Exaggeration Example: “It’s so hot in here that I think I’m melting.” or “I’m starving to death. When is lunch?”
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Imagery “Word Pictures” Example: The softly rustling leaves gently moved in a caressing breeze along the banks of the happily bubbling stream in the quiet, shaded woods.
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Irony When the opposite you expect happens. Example: It was ironic when the student with the worst eyesight turned out to have the smallest project.
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Simile/Metaphor Both compare two things that don’t normally go together. Similes use “like” or “as” in the comparison as in, “My sister’s hair flows like a brown river.” Metaphors do not use “like” or “as;” for example, “My sister’s hair is a flowing river of brown.”
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Personification Something not human is given human qualities Example: The sky wept sadly all week long.
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Point of view The relationship of the narrator to the story. Types of point of view: –1 st person –3 rd person limited –3 rd person omniscient
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Symbolism Something that represents a larger idea Example: A dove sometimes symbolizes or represents peace.
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Theme The main idea or message of the story.
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Onomatopoeic A word that is spelled to represent a sound. Example: buzz, fizz, whoosh
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Alliteration A phrase where the initial (beginning) sound is repeated in most words. Example: The first fellow fell forward.
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Analogy A comparison between two things that may have one aspect in common. Similar to a simile or metaphor, but it can be an entire story, passage, or just a phrase.
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Rhyme Scheme The pattern of rhyming words in a poem. Example: Two roads diverged in a yellow wood And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could To where it bent in the under growth
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