Creado por Litsa Rethimiotakis
hace más de 8 años
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Pregunta | Respuesta |
Allusion | A reference to another literary work. It can also reference a person, place, or event |
Contrast/Juxtaposition | Refers to the overlap or mixing of opposite or different situations, characters, settings, moods, or points of view in order to clarify meaning, purpose, or character, or for emphasis |
Style | The individual manner in which an author expresses his or her thoughts and feelings - Repetition, descriptive language, exaggeration, syntax, punctuation, etc. |
Tone | The authors attitude towards his/her subject or readers. Not the same as mood or atmosphere |
Poetic License | Liberty taken by a poet to produce a desired effect by deviating from conventional rules, etc. |
Anthem | A hymn of praise, patriotism, or devotion |
Metaphor | A comparison between two unlike things -The comparison suggests that one thing IS another -Often the comparisons are implied rather than directly stated |
Extended Metaphor | When the metaphor extends through a whole work or a large portion |
Simile | A direct comparison between two unlike things that are connected by the word "like" or "as" |
Personification | A figure of speech in which an animal, an object, or an idea is given human qualities |
Rhyme | Correspondence of sound between words or the endings of words |
Rhyme Scheme | The ordered pattern of rhymes at the end of the lines of a poem or verse |
Iambic pentameter | a line of verse with five metrical feet (10 syllables) -each consists of one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable |
Stanza | A group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem |
Atmosphere | The mood or feeling of a literary work |
Imagery | The use of a language to evoke a picture or a concrete sensation of a person, object, place or experience |
Satire | The ridicule of an idea, person, or type sometimes in order to provoke change. Satire often mocks human vices or shortcomings |
Parody | A literary work that imitates the characteristic style of an author or work for comic effect or ridicule -A humorous, satirical or off-beat imitation of a person, event, or work of literature |
Hyperbole | An exaggeration in the service of truth. Used to add emphasis |
Lyric | Any short poem intended mainly to express a state of mind or feeling |
Couplet | Two consecutive lines that rhyme |
Quatrain | A stanza of four lines |
Sestet | A stanza of six lines |
Octave | Stanza of eight lines |
Dramatic Monologue | A poetic form in which a single character speaks to a silent listener at a critical moment -Reveals a dramatic situation and his/her own character |
Unreliable Narrator | The person telling the story who cannot be trusted |
Irony | A literary device which reveals concealed or contradictory |
Verbal Irony | Contrast is evident between what a character says and what the character actually means |
Situational Irony | A set of circumstances turn out differently from what was expected or considered appropriate |
Dramatic Irony | The author shares with the reader information not known by a character |
Ballad | A narrative poem that is handed down in oral tradition, or a written poem that imitates the traditional ballad. Usually uses repetition and a repeated refrain |
Elegy | Mournful, melancholic poem, especially a song of lament for the dead |
Epic | A long narrative poem that tells of the adventures of heroic characters, covers a long period of time, or describe a monumental taste |
Narrative | This is another word for story. A narrative poem is one that tells a story |
Free Verse | Verse that lacks regular meter and line length but relies upon natural rhythms |
Ode | A serious, sincere poem written in praise of something or someone. Often parodied |
Accent | The emphasis or stress placed on a certain syllable in a foot of poetry |
Alliteration | The repetition of initial consonant sounds |
Assonance | The repetition of internal vowel sounds in words |
Dissonance | A harsh, disagreeable combination of words |
Imperfect Rhyme | A resemblance in the sound of words that is not exact as in "move" and "love" |
Internal Rhyme | Rhyme which comes within lines |
Feminine Rhyme | A rhyme extending over two or more syllables, and in "sister" and "blister" |
Masculine Rhyme | A rhyme in which the final syllables rhyme, as in "singing/walking" and "house/mouse" |
Onomatopoeia | the use of words which sound like what they mean |
Refrain | A line, part of line, or group of lines which is repeated throughout a poem, sometimes with slight changes |
Repetition | the repeated use of key words, phrases, stanzas or sounds in a poem |
Oxymoron | Two words placed close together that are contradictory yet have truth in them |
Versification | Metrical structure that includes accent, foot, meter, rhyme, rhythm, and stanza form |
Metonymy | The use of a closely related idea for the idea itself |
Synecdoche | The use of the part for the whole idea |
Paradox | This is a statement in which there is an apparent contradiction which is actually true |
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