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All 34 terms

TermDefinition
clichea trite, overused expression
vernacularthe everyday, common, spoken language as opposed to an official, formal language
colloquialisman informal word or phrase that is more common in conversation than in formal speech or writing
dialoguethe lines spoken by the characters in a play or narrative
end-stopped linewhen poetry contains a pause in meaning (thus in reading) at the end of a line or a couplet; often marked by punctuation but not always
enjambmentthe continuation of meaning, without pause or break, from one line of poetry to the next
euphemisman indirect figure of speech, usually in order to avoid offense (e.g., saying "passed on" instead of "died")
figurative languagewriting that uses one or more figures of speech (irony, metaphor....)
generalizationa broad, all-encompassing statement
genretype or category of literary work (e.g., poetry, essay, short story, novel, drama)
hyperboleexaggeration for effect
interior monologuewhen a character relates his/her internal, emotional experience (i.e., "getting inside his/her head")
juxtapositionthe placement of two or more things together, especially in order to suggest a link between them or emphasize the contrast between them
metonymya figure of speech where the name of something is substituted by something closely associated with it (the pen is mightier than the sword)
motivationthe reasons, justifications, explanations for a character's actions
narrativean account of an actual or fictional event
nemesisagent of retribution (the person who punishes)
paradoxa phrase or statement that seems contradictory but may be true (e.g., less is more)
parallelismphrases or sentences of a similar construction/meaning placed side by side, balancing each other
poetic justicethe operation of justice in a play with fair distribution of rewards for good deeds and punishment for wrongdoing
protagonistthe most important character in a play or story
pathetic fallacythe attribution of human feelings or responses to inanimate things or objects (especially the weather)
pathosthe quality which evokes from the reader feelings of pity, tenderness, and sympathy
satirethe use of ridicule, sarcasm, wit, or irony in order to expose, set right, destroy, or laugh at a vice, human folly, or social evil
sentimenthonest emotion
sentimentalityexcessive or artificial emotion, emotion unjustified by events
stock charactercaricatures having no real personality other than the emotions and actions that correspond to the type they represent
structurethe arrangement of the text--paragraphs, stanzas; linear or nonlinear
stylethe arrangement of words in a way that best expresses the author's individuality, idea, intent
syntaxsentence construction
tragic flawthe defect in the tragic hero or heroine that leads to a downfall
understatementthe opposite of hyperbole
synecdochea figure of speech in which a part is made to represent the whole or vice versa
deus ex machinaan unexpected power or event saving a seemingly hopeless situation, esp. as a contrived plot device in a play, novel, or short story

Set Information

Terms 34
Creator aparmour15
Created February 5, 2009
Groups None
Subject lit terms
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