Quizlet

Flashcards: 62 Literary Terms

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plotthe series of related actions or events in a literary work
sequencethe arrangement of events in a literary work
conflictstruggle between opposing forces; any problem that must be solved
internal and externalthe two major types of conflict
internal conflicta problem or struggle within a character
external conflicta problem or struggle between a character and someone or something outside of the character
expositionestablishes the setting, identifies the characters, introduces the basic situation (problem may be revealed here)
initiating incidentintroduces the central conflict (sometimes it occurs before the opening of the story)
rising actionany events leading up to the climax
climaxthe point of highest interest, the conflict must be resolved one way or another or a character begins to take action to end the conflict
falling actionevents that occur between the climax and the conclusion
conclusion/resolutionthe story's end
settingthe time and place of the story (where and when it takes place)
suspensethe quality of the story that makes the reader curious and excited about what will happen next
foreshadowingan author's use of hints or clues to suggest events that will occur later in the story
flashbackpresents events of the past in the midst of a story in the present
moodthe feeling created in a reader by a literary work or passage
tonethe attitude toward the subject and audience conveyed by the language and rhythm of the speaker in a literary work
charactera person or animal who takes part in the action of a literary work
protagonistthe main character in a literary work
antagonista character or force in conflict with the main character
round characterthis character is fully developed – the writer reveals good and bad traits as well as background
flat characterthis character seems to possess only one or two personality traits – little or no background is revealed
dynamic characterthis character changes as a result of the action in the story
static characterthis character stays the same throughout the story
traitone of the qualities that makes up a character's personality
character motivationa reason that explains, or partially explains a character's thoughts, feelings, actions or speech
dialogueconversation between characters
dialecta form of language spoken by people in a particular region or group
jargonthe special words or terms used by the members of a particular profession or class
slangan informal, often short-lived kind of language used in place of standard words
informal languagethe language of everyday speech, may use contractions and slang
formal languagethe standard language of written communication, formal speeches, and presentations; may not use contractions or slang
narratorthe speaker or character who tells the story
point of viewthe relationship between the narrator and the story he/she is telling - the perspective from which the story is told
prosethe ordinary form of writing; most writing that is not poetry, drama, or song
fictionprose writing that tells about imaginary characters and events
nonfictionprose writing that presents and explains ideas about real people, places, objects or events
fantasyhighly imaginative writing that has elements not found in real life
biographya form of nonfiction in which a writer tells the life story of another person
autobiographya form of nonfiction in which a writer tells his or her own life story
genrea division or type of literature – generally prose, poetry or drama
themethe message, central concern, or insight into life revealed in a literary work
stereotypea fixed, generalized idea about a character, place, or situation
symbolanything that stands for or represents something else
allusiona reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art
ironythe general name given to literary techniques that involve surprising, interesting, or amusing contradictions
verbal ironywords are used to suggest the opposite of their usual meaning or contradict their usual meaning
situational ironyan event occurs that directly contradicts the expectations of the character, the reader, or the audience (a surprise twist)
dramatic ironya contradiction between what a character thinks and what the reader or audience knows to be true (we, the audience, know more than the character/s)
euphemisman inoffensive word or term used in place of another that is felt to be offensive
idioman expression having a special meaning different from the usual meanings of the words (example – "hit the road")
figurative languagewriting or speech that is not meant to be taken literally
figures of speechtypes of figurative language
similea figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between two unlike subjects using like or as
metaphora figure of speech that makes an indirect comparison between two unlike subjects (something is described as if it were something else)
hyperbolea figure of speech that is an exaggeration for effect
personificationa figure of speech in which a non-human subject is given human characteristics
alliterationthe repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words
onomatopoeiathe use of words that imitate sounds
stanzaa division of poetry similar to a paragraph in prose
refraina regularly repeated line or group of lines in a poem or song