| # | Term | Definition | From Set |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | symbolism | The use of words, places, people, or objects to mean something beyond their literal meaning. | English Semesters I and II |
| 2 | Symbolism | A word or phrase signifying a sign or mark representing something else. A symbol brings a significant idea and all connotations through use of a single word. Eg. The cross, Christianity. | Language Features - NCEA Lv2 English |
| 3 | Symbolism | A decice in literature where no object represents and idea | Literary Devices |
| 4 | symbolism | is the practice of using an object to represent a belief, idea, superstition, or an institution. | My Literary Terms- Part 1 |
| 5 | symbolism | the use of one thing to stand for or represent another | Middle School Reading Literary Terms |
| 6 | symbolism | is the practice of using an object to represent a belief, idea, superstition, or an institution. | Literary Terms 1 |
| 7 | symbolism | emerged in 1885, stated that in realism the truth cannot be shown objectivly, truth isnt rational, cannot be represented, used symbols to envoke feelings and states of mind, intrested in emotion and reaction | Intro To Theater (exam 3) |
| 8 | symbolism | using an object to stand for, or symbolize, an idea or concept | L.A. Glossary |
| 9 | symbolism | is the practice of using an object to represent a belief, idea, superstition, or an institution. | Literary Terms |
| 10 | symbolism | when concrete itmes represent abstract ideas such as death and happiness | Language Arts |
| 11 | Symbolism | The French literary movement which paralleled impressionism. | isms |
| 12 | Symbolism | the first major antirealistic movement in the arts and in theatre. emphasizes the symbolic nature of theatrical presentations and the abstract possibilities of drama, floursihed as significant movement from the latin 19th century to the early 20th century, when it broke into various submovements: expressionism, surrealism, theatricalism, and so on | Th&F 100 Final Part 2 |
| 13 | Symbolism | the use of a thing, character, object, or idea to represent something else | Literary Terms (for English Exam) |
| 14 | symbolism | the french literary movement which paralleled impressionism | Chapter 11..music |
| 15 | symbolism | a set of symbols | Spelling Sheets |
| 16 | symbolism | the use of object that stands for something larger than itself | Literary/Poetry/Syntax Terms FINAL |
| 17 | symbolism | a literary technique in which an author uses an object to represent concrete ideas, events or relationships | DuncanLiteraryTerms |
| 18 | Symbolism | the use of symbols to represent ideas or qualities | english exam terms |
| 19 | Symbolism | the use of symbols to represent ideas or qualities | English II H Spring Exam Terms |
| 20 | symbolism | the use of a thing, character, object or idea to represent something else | english |
| 21 | symbolism | use of symbols, or anything that stands for or represents something else | Literary Terms - Final Exam |
| 22 | symbolism | using an object or action that means something more than its literal meaning | English |
| 23 | symbolism | anything that stands for or represents something else | Literary terms |
| 24 | Symbolism | a concrete object w/a abstract meaning | The Diary of Anne Frank |
| 25 | symbolism | the practice of representing things by symbols, or of investing things with a symbolic meaning or character. | literary terms for english final |
| 26 | Symbolism | the use of symbols or anything that is meant to be taken both literally and as representative of a higher and more complex significance | AP English Vocabulary |
| 27 | Symbolism | The practice of representing things by means of symbols or of attributing symbolic meanings or significance to objects, events, or relationships. | LA Vocab Jan 24 (2) |
| 28 | symbolism | an object to represent an abstract idea | Literary Analysis - Poetic Terms and Sound Devices |
| 29 | symbolism | a literary device in which a person, place, thing, or event stands both for itself and for something beyond itself | Review: Anglo-Saxons and Beowulf |
| 30 | symbolism | a literary device in which a person, place, thing, or event stands both for itself and for something beyond itself | Anglo-Saxon and Beowulf flash |
| 31 | Symbolism | Use of one object to represent or suggest another | Figures of Speech |
| 32 | Symbolism | When something in a story represents an idea | Grammer Parts of Speech |
| 33 | Symbolism | When a person, place, or event stands for itself and for something beyond itself as well | ela 5 |
| 34 | symbolism | the use of things to represent ideas | Combat Zone Read 180 |
| 35 | Symbolism | the practice of investing things with symbolic meaning, The use of words, places, people, or objects to mean something beyond their literal meaning. | NWEASilverTeamVocabulary |
| 36 | symbolism | the practice of investing things with symbolic meaning | week6 6-11 |
| 37 | Symbolism | the systematic use of recurrent symbols or images in a work to create an added level of meaning. Example: most of the characters and incidents in Melville's Moby Dick can be interpreted symbolically. Similarly, the raft, the river, the towns, and "the territory" combine to provide a pattern of symbolic meaning in Twain's Huckleberry Finn. | Lit Terms for ENGL 122 |
| 38 | Symbolism | the practice of investing things with symbolic meaning, The use of words, places, people, or objects to mean something beyond their literal meaning. | gold la |
| 39 | symbolism | something that represents something else | PIA - Skills to Pay the Bills - Sky Pilots |
| 40 | Symbolism | the practice of investing things with symbolic meaning, The use of words, places, people, or objects to mean something beyond their literal meaning. | NWEA words |
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