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Elements of Literature Final Exam Literary Terms Alliteration Allusion Antagonist Assonance Repetition of initial consonant sounds EX: “while I pondered weak and weary.” (Poe) a reference to a well-known person, place event, literary work, myth, or work of art (Classical Allusions, which are references to Greek and Roman history and mythology, are often used by Shakespeare) a character or force in conflict with the main character Repetition of vowel sounds EX: Romeo: “So shows a snowy dove trooping with crows" (“Oh” sound is repeated) Character Foil a character who serves as a contrast to another character EX: Nurse and Lady Capulet Colloquial Language ordinary, everyday speech Conflict opposition between characters or forces in a work of literature-- Standard conflicts are person vs. person, person vs. self, person vs. nature, person vs. society Consonance repetition of consonant sounds within words EX: “And the silken, sad uncertain rustling of each purple curtain…” (Poe) The “S” sound is repeated. Diction a writer’s or speaker’s choice of words Drama a work intended for performance by actors on a stage Dramatic Irony when the reader or audience knows more than one of the characters on stage/when the reader or audience knows something that the characters do not know Dynamic Character a character who grows, learns, changes through the events of a story Flashback an interruption of the chronological sequence of a story to describe an earlier event Flat Character a character who embodies only one main character trait and does not change in the course of the story Hyperbole exaggeration Iambic Pentameter a meter in poetry made up of 5 units of an unstressed syllable followed by an stressed syllable. Shakespeare’s plays are written iambic pentameter, also known as blank verse EX: “A pair/of star-/crossed lov/ers take/ their lives.” (daDUM x5) Imagery description that appeals to the five senses (sight, sound, smell, taste, touch) Interior Monologue a passage of writing presenting a character's inner thoughts and emotions Metaphor a comparison, does not use “like” or “as” EX: “Juliet is the sun.” Monologue speech given by one character Narrator person telling the story Oxymoron two contradictory terms combined Personification an object, idea or animal is given human thoughts, feelings or attributes Point of view (first person) told from the narrator’s viewpoint, using “I” and “We” Point of view (third person omniscient) told from the viewpoint of an all-knowing narrator who can comment on or reveal all of the different characters’ thoughts and feelings Protagonist the main character in a literary work, faces the major conflict Round Character a character who is fully developed with a variety of traits, both good and bad, and background Setting the time and place of a story Simile a comparison using “like” or “as” EX: Lord Capulet “Death lies on her like an untimely frost/ Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.” Situational irony Contrast between what the reader expects to happen and what actually happens Soliloquy Sonnet Symbol Theme Tragedy Verbal Irony in a play, a character speaks while alone on stage in order to reveal his or her thoughts to the audience a poem with fourteen lines, usually in iambic pentameter, with a specific rhyme scheme something that stands for or represents something else the main idea or message (not a lesson) of a work of art a type of serious drama that ends in disaster or downfall (usually death) for the main character/s; the tragic ending may be caused by character flaws, fate or a combination of both intentionally saying the opposite of what is meant; saying one thing and meaning another