metaphor: referring to something as something elsesimile: explicit comparison ("like", "as")personification: attributing human characteristic/personal nature to something nonhumanconnotation: associated, symbolic meaning of a word (often relies on culturally shared conventions)
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Phonology
onomatopoeia: a sound written downphonetic spelling: written like it soundsprosody: "!"rhythmcontribute to entertainment & character portrayals & show emotions of subjects
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Graphology
genre usually determines the visual choices of how to construct a texttexts can deviate from their genre by using the conventions of another genre: INTERTEXTUALITY
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Word Classes
open classes: nouns: naming word (put 'the'/'a' in front)verbs: doing word (inflections ('s'/'ed') change tense)adjectives: describe the noun (before or after)adverbs: describe verb (manner, time, frequency, place, reason)closes classes:pronouns: stand in place of noun (personal pronouns = biggest category)determiners: add detail/clarity to noun ('the', 'an', 'a', 'mine', 'his', 'her')conjunctions: words that link clauses (coordinating, subordinating)prepositions: express relationship between 2 parts of a sentence (in, on, under, to)
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Nouns
Properdenoted by use of Capital Letter'The Queen', 'Christmas', 'Amsterdam'Commonrefer to whole class of things'house', 'animal', 'fruit'Abstractgeneral ideas & concepts'kindness', 'difficulty', 'truth'Concretecan be seen or touched'pig', 'computer', 'table'
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Adjectives
Basedescribes quality of a noun'big'Comparativecomparison of a quality between 2 nouns'bigger'Superlative3 or more are contrasted with the 1 optimum of that quality'biggest'
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Adverbs
Manner: How?Time: When?Place: Where?Frequency: How often?Reason: Why?
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Verbs
Main Verbs:dynamic: express physical action/eventstative: express states of being/internal processesAuxiliary Verbs:primary auxiliary verbs: BE // HAVE // DOmodal auxiliary verbsepistemic: express degrees of possibility/certainty/probabilitydeontic: express degrees of obligation/permission/ability/necessity in terms of freedom to act
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Personal Pronouns
(person, number, case)I - 1st person - singular - subjectHe - 1st person - singular - subjectThey - 3rd person - plural - subjectUs - 1st person - plural - objectYou - 2nd person - singular/plural - subject/objectHim - 3rd person - singular - object
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Conjunctions
Coordinating Conjunctions
AND
BUT
OR
Subordinating Conjunctions
where
before
after
until
since
when
whenever
while
although
though
whether
as
because
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Voice
Activethe subject is ACTIVELY doing what the verb denotes.
Passivesubject is RECEIVING the
action denoted by the verb.
less direct
shifts focus to
the object
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Mood
Declarative
(statement) – eg “The car is parked there
Imperative
(command) – eg “Park the car there”Interrogative
(question) – eg “Where is the car parked”
Exclamatory
(exclamation) – eg “Oh damn!”
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Rhetoric
used to persuade/influenceRhetorical QuestionsInterrogatives that don't expect a replyDesired response obvious from proceeding statements - heightens argument - fully involves audienceSyntactic Parallelismsimilar grammatical patterns that create a rhythm"one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind"Tricolonthree repeated thingshighlights key messages"Education, education, education""we offer quality, affordability, and reliability"
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Phrases
one or more words functioning as a unit in a sentence
head word w/ accompanying modifiers (pre/post. describe/give more info)
Noun Phrasesgroup of words built around a nounVerb Phrasesgroup of words built around a verbAdverb Phrasesgroup of words providing info on the verb (where, when, how, how often, why)
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Sentences
Simple Sentencea clause that makes sense on its ownCompound Sentence2+ clauses joined by COORDINATING conjunction (and/but/or)Complex Sentence2+ clauses joined by SUBORDINATING conjunction (and/but/or)1 main clause + subordinating clause(s)Minor Sentencenot complete clauses: lack a VERB or SUBJECTCompound-complex Sentencemixing coordinating & subordinating clauses