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Download Term Definition Example 1. metaphor a comparison between two
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Term Definition Unit 1 a comparison between two things wherein one thing is spoken of as though it were something else 1. metaphor 2. hyperbole a deliberate exaggeration or overstatement 3. images; there are seven types: visual, auditory, gustatory, olfactory, tactile, kinesthetic, and kinetic a description or representation of an experience of one of the five senses or an experience of motion: visual=sight; auditory=sound;gustatory=taste; olfactory=smell;tactile=touch; kinesthetic=human or animal movement; kinetic=general movement 4. euphemism 5. farce a drama intended to create (lots of) laughter and dependent less on plot or character; the laughter is largely derived from coarse humor and impossible exaggerations 6. stanza a group of lines roughly analogous in function in poetry to the paragraph's function in prose 7. cacophony a harsh, unpleasant combination of sounds; the opposite of euphony 8. refrain a line or set of lines repeated several times over the course of a poem Unit 2 a device where being indirect replaces directness to avoid unpleasantness Example "Life is a broken-winged bird." "No; this my hand will rather/The multitudinous seas incarnadine,/Making the green one red." "passed away" instead of "died" 9. sonnet a poem almost invariably of fourteen lines and following one of several set rhyme schemes; ITALIAN/PETRARCHAN: two divisions called the octave and the sestet;ENGLISH/ SHAKESPEAREAN: four divisions-three quatrains and a concluding couplet (two lines) 10. lament a poem of sadness or grief over the death of a loved one or over some other intense loss 11. juxtaposition a poetic and rhetorical device in which normally unassociated ideas, words, or phrases are placed next to each other 12. caricature a portrait (verbal or otherwise) that exaggerates a facet of a personality 13. allusion Unit 3 a reference to a well-known person, place event, literary work, or work of art; often divided into historical/biblical/mythological 14. masculine rhyme a rhyme ending on the final stressed syllable 15. aside a speech (usually just a short comment) made by an actor to the audience, as though momentarily stepping outside of the action on stage; the actor acknowledges the audience's presence 16. soliloquy a speech spoken by a character alone on stage; it is meant to convey the impression that the audience is listening to the character's thoughts, though it is NOT meant to imply that the actor acknowledges the audience's presence the picture of King David and the prophet Nathan--who accused David of adultery--in Dimmesdale's apartment in The Scarlet Letter regular old rhyme; lines ending with fire and aspire 17. paradox a statement that seems contradictory or absurd but that expresses the truth 18. abstract a style of writing that is typically complex, discusses intangible qualities like good and evil, and seldom uses examples to support its points 19. interior monologue a term for novels and poetry, not plays; it refers to writing that records the mental talking that goes on inside a character's head, and it is usually coherent and resembles actual speech 20. simile when like or as is used to make a comparison between two basically unlike subjects 21. aphorism a terse statement--often witty--which "A classic? That's a book that expresses a general truth or a moral people praise and don't read." principle 22. elegy a type of poem that meditates on death or mortality in a serious, thoughtful manner; an elegy often uses the recent death of a noted person or loved one as a starting point; an elegy also memorializes specific dead people 23. lyric "For when I am weak, then I am strong." "She is as flighty as a sparrow." Unit 4 a type of poetry that explores the poet's personal interpretation of and feelings about the world (or the part that this poem is about); when used as a tone word it refers to a sweet, emotional melodiousness 24. apostrophe when a speaker directly addresses an absent person or a personified quality 25. parody a work done in imitation of another, usually in order to mock it "Age, thou art sham'd/ Rome, thou hast lost the breed of noble bloods!" 26. tragedy a work of literature, especially a play, that results in catastrophe for the main character 27. colloquialism an expression used in informal "I'm toasted"; "Now I've got this conversation but not accepted wicked headache" universaly in speech or writing; lies between formal language and slang 28. feminine rhyme lines rhymed by their final two syllables 29. euphony pleasing sounds; the opposite of cacophony; a subjective element 30. bombast pretentious, exaggeratedly learned language; when a person tries to be eloquent by using the largest, most uncommon words, one falls into bombast 31. catharsis refers to the "cleansing" of emotion Macbeth allows us to feel the an audience member experiences, intensity of ambition and the having lived (vicariously) through hardening of sin the experiences presented on stage; this term is drawn from Aristotle's writings on tragedy 32. understatement saying less than is actually meant, usually in an ironic way 33. anachronism 34. irony; there are three types: verbal, dramatic, and situational Unit 5 something out of its normal time the basic meaning is a difference between reality and appearance; verbal irony occurs when what is said is the exact opposite of what is meant; dramatic irony occurs when the audience has knowledge that is hidden from the characters; situational irony emphasizes that humans are subject to forces beyond their comprehension and control and thus are often helpless Macbeth , Julius Caesar , Romeo and Juliet lines ending with running and gunning No, that didn't hurt at all. "There in the coffin lies Caesar" (In ancient Rome, coffins had not yet been invented.) verbal-"Brutus is an honorable man"; dramatic-we know Juliet is not dead but Romeo does not; situational-Piggy is murdered when he acts with the defiance the tribe exhibits 35. point of view; there are four types: first person, third person omniscient, third person limited ominiscient, and third person objectice the basic meaning is the position from which details of a story are perceived and told; first person p.o.v. is characterized by the pronoun "I", "my", "we", or "our", and the narrator is either a direct participant or observer of the action; third person p.o.v. is characterized by the pronouns "she", "he", "it", or "they"; in third person omniscient, the activities and thoughts of all characters are fully and openly known; in third person limited omniscient, the activities and thoughts of only one character are known; in third person objective, the narration is confined only to what can be seen and heard with no commentary nor ability to see into the thoughts of characters 36. enjambment the continuation of a syntactic unit "Turning and turning in the (sentence or phrase) from one line widening gyre/The falcon cannot of a poem to another with no pause hear the falconer" 37. oxymoron when two opposing or contradictory freezing fire ideas are combined 38. hubris Unit 6 the excessive pride or ambition that leads to the main character's downfall (also drawn from Aristotle's writings on tragedy) 39. denouement the final unraveling of a plot; the solution of a mystery; an explanation or outcome (sometimes denouement is used as a synonym for falling action) 40. persona the narrator or speaker of a poem 41. exposition the part of a story or play that the first scene in Romeo and introduces the characters, the Juliet wherein the families fight setting, and the basic situation; any writing that informs 42. consonance the repetition in two or more words of final consonants in stressed syllables hid head 43. dramatic monologue when a single speaker in literature says something to a silent but present audience "Dover Beach" (poem) 44. alliteration the repetition of initital consonant sounds silence cynically surged softly 45. assonance the repetition of vowel sounds followed by different consonants in two or more stressed syllables weak and weary 46. onomatopoeia the use of words that imitate sounds subtle:"The moan of doves in immemorial elms/ And murmuring of innumberable bees"; obvious: "hiss", "buzz", "sizzle" 47. personification when a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics Additional Words The lone tree stood at attention in the bare plain.