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Kenning Metaphorical compound word or phrase substituted for simple nouns.
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Caesura A pause in a line that divides the line into two parts, with each part having two accented syllables.
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Oral Tradition Literature that is passed from one generation to another by performance or word of mouth.
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Frame Story Exists when a story is told within a narrative setting or frame, creating a story within a story.
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Prologue An introductory scene in a drama.
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Oxymoron/Paradox A statement that seems to contradict or oppose itself but, in fact, reveals a kind of truth.
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Appositive A noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it.
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Iambic Pentameter A metrical pattern of five feet each of which is made up of two syllables, the first unstressed and the second stressed.
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Soliloquy A speech in a dramatic work in which a character speaks his or her thoughts aloud, usually while on the stage alone, not speaking to other characters, and perhaps unaware of the audience.
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Dramatic Monologue A lyric poem in which a speaker addresses a silent or absent listener in a moment of high intensity or deep emotion.
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Comic Relief Humorous scenes, incidents, or speeches that are included in a serious drama to provide a reduction in emotional intensity.
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Dramatic Irony Occurs when the reader or viewer knows something that a character does not know.
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Sonnet A lyric poem of 14 lines, commonly written in iambic pentameter. The English version consists of three quatrains and a couplet and has a rhyme scheme of ababcdcdefefgg.
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Internal Rhyme Rhyme that occurs within a single line.
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Satire A literary technique in which ideas, customs, behaviors, or institutions are ridiculed for the purpose of improving society.
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Metaphysical Conceit An extended metaphor that makes a surprising connection between two quite dissimilar things.
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Antithesis A figure of speech in which sharply contrasting words, phrases, clauses or sentences are juxtaposed to emphasize a point.
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Claim The writer’s position on an issue or problem.
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Parody Writing that imitates either the style or the subject matter of a literary work for the purpose of criticism, humorous effect, or flattering tribute.
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Counter Argument An argument made to oppose another argument.
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Verisimilitude Refers to the appearance of truth or actuality.
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Diction A writer’s or speaker’s choice of words or phrases.
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Imagery Refers to language that appeals to the senses; words and phrases that create vivid sensory experiences for the reader.
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Allusion An indirect reference to a person, place, event, or literary work with which the author believes the reader will be familiar.
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Apostrophe A figure of speech in which an object, an abstract quality, or an absent or imaginary person is addressed directly as if present and able to understand.
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Blank Verse Unrhymed iambic pentameter.
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Symbolism The use of people, places, or objects that have concrete meanings but also stand for something else (such as an idea or feeling).
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Metaphor A figure of speech that compares two things that have something in common.
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Couplet A rhymed pair of lines.
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Ode A complex lyric poem that develops a serious and dignified theme; often commemorates events or praises people or elements of nature.
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Inference A logical assumption that is based on observed facts and one’s own knowledge and experience.
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Paraphrase The restating of information in one’s own words.
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Personification A figure of speech in which an object, animal, or idea is given human characteristics.
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Hyperbole A figure of speech in which the truth is exaggerated for emphasis or humorous effect.
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Modernism A literary movement that roughly spanned the time period between the two word wars, 1914-1945.
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Stream of Consciousness A technique that was developed by modernist writers to present the flow of a character’s seemingly unconnected thoughts, responses, and sensations.
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Internal Conflict A conflict between opposing forces within a character.
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Motivation The stated or implied reason behind a character’s behavior.
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Rhythm A pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables
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