Flashcards: AP English Language Vocabulary

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Raeget on April 30, 2008

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ap, ap english, english, vocabulary, vocab

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Vocabulary for AP English Language

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AP Lang & Comp, ★<>★The Group That Can't Be Killed★<>★, Crites's stuff, AP English

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Flashcards: AP English Language Vocabulary

Ad Hominem Argument
Attacks the opposing speaker or another person rather than addressing the issues at hand
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Definitions

Ad Hominem Argument Attacks the opposing speaker or another person rather than addressing the issues at hand
Allegory Fictional work in which the characters represent ideas or concepts
Alliteration The repetition of consonant sounds, usually at the beginning of words
Allusion A reference, usually oblique or faint, to another thing, idea, or person
Ambiguity Uncertain or indefinite; subject to more than one interpretation
Analogy The correspondence or resemblance between two things that are essentially different
Anecdote A short story used to illustrate a point the author is making
Antecedent Every pronoun refers back to a previous noun or pronoun
Antithesis An opposition or contrast of ideas that is often expressed in balanced phrases or clauses
Apostrophe A figure of speech in which an absent person or personified object is addressed by a speaker
Appositive A word or phrase that follow a noun or pronoun for emphasis or clarity
Assonance A type of internal rhyming in which vowel souds are repeated
Asyndeton When the conjunctions (such as "and" or "but") that would normally connect a string of words, phrases, or clauses are omitted from a sentence
Atmosphere The emotional feeling -or mood- of a place, scene, or event
Attitude The feelings of a particular speaker or piece of writing toward a subject, person, or idea
Contrast Oppositions
Colloquial Language Slang or common language that is informal
Connotative The interpretive level of a word based on associated images rather than the literal meaning
Deductive Argument The process of moving from a general rule to a specific example
Diction An author's choice of words
Didactic Writing which has the purpose of teaching or instructing
Elegy A work that expresses sorrow
Ellipses Indicated by a series of three periods; shows that words have been omitted
Ethos Refers to generally ethics, or values
Euphemism A mild or pleasant sounding expression that substitutes for a harsh, indelicate, or simply less pleasant idea
Exposition Writing or speech that is organized to explain
Figurative Language All uses of language that imply an imaginative comparison
Foreshadowing A purposeful hint placed in a work of literature to suggest what may occur later in the narrative
Hyperbole A figure of speech in which exaggeration is used to achieve emphasis
Imagery A mental picture that is conjured by specific words and associations
Inductive Argument Creating a case by providing specific examples and drawing a conclusion based on the evidence they provide
Irony When a situation produces and outcome that is the opposite of what is expected
Juxtaposition When two contrasting things are placed next to each other for comparison
Logos The use of reason as a controlling principle in an argument
Metaphor A figure of speech in which two unlike things are compared directly
Metonymy A figure of speech in which something is referred to by using the name of something that is associated with it
Mood The prevailing or dominant feeling of a work, scene, or event
Onomatopoeia An effect created by words that have sounds that reinforce their meaning
Oxymoron Two contradictory words in one expression
Paradox A seeming contradiction that in fact reveals some truth
Parallelism A literary technique that relies on the use of the same syntactical structures
Parody An effort to ridicule or make fun of a literary work or an author by writing a comic imitation of the work
Pathos A sympathetic feeling of pity or compassion evoked by an artistic work
Periodic Sentence Presents the main clause at the end of the sentence, for emphasis
Persona The character created by the voice and narration of the speaker of a text
Personification A figure of speech in which ideas or objects are described as having human qualities or personalities
Point of View The particular perspective from which a story is told
Pun A play on words
Repetition The reiteration of a word or phrase for emphasis
Rhetoric The art and logic of a written or spoken argument to persuade, to analyze, or to expose
Rhetorical Strategy The way an author organizes words, sentences, and overall argument in order to achieve a particular purpose
Rhetorical Devices The specific language tools that an author uses to carry out a rhetorical strategy (diction, imagery, or syntax)
Rhetorical Question A question that is asked for the sake of argument
Satire To ridicule or mock ideas, persons, events, or doctrines
Selection of Detail The specific words, incidents, images, or events the author uses to create a scene or narrative
Simile A commonly used figure of speech that compares one thing with another using the words "like" or "as"
Speaker The narrator of a story, poem, or drama
Syllogism A form of deductive reasoning in which pieces of evidence are used to create a new conclusion
Symbol Something that stands for something else
Synonym A word that has the same, or nearly the same, meaning as another word
Syntax The way words are arranged in a sentence
Tension A feeling excitement and expectation the reader or audience feels because of the conflict, mood, or atmosphere of the work
Theme The central idea
Tone Attitude
Understatement When an author assigns less significance to an event or thing than it deserves
Zeugma When a word is used with two adjacent words in the same construction, but only makes literal sense with one of them

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