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Cunningham Intermediate School 234 Handy reference for students: Reading and Literary Terms Allegory: A story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning. Alliteration: The repetition of consonant sounds, most often at the beginning of words. Ex: “I’ve roamed and rambled and I followed my footsteps.” Allusion: A reference in a work of literature to a character, place, or situation from another work of literature. (Ex: In The Giver, the names Jonas and Gabriel are Biblical allusions. They refer to characters in The Bible). Anecdote: A brief account of a true event meant to entertain or inform. Anecdotes are often used to reveal personality in nonfiction. Antagonist: In a literary piece, the opponent or rival of the protagonist (hero). Assonance: Resemblance or similarity of sounds between vowels followed by different consonants in stressed syllables. (ex: w ke and h te—notice how the “long a” makes them sound similar.) Atmosphere: The mood or feeling that runs through a work of literature. (Ex: In “All Summer in a Day,” Bradbury stresses the rainy, gloomy aspects of the planet on which the characters live.) Audience: The type of reader for whom a work is intended. (Ex: Editorials in a newspaper supporting a candidate are intended for voters.) Author’s purpose: Authors write for a variety of purposes, i.e., to inform, to express their opinions, to entertain, to persuade, etc. These are general reasons for an author to write a piece. Readers should consider the specific purpose of each piece. Autobiography: The story of a person’s life written by that person. Ballad: A song-like poem that tells a story, often about romance or adventure. 1 Biography: The story of a person’s life written by someone other than that person. Cause and effect: A relationship between events in which one event—the cause—is the reason why another event—the effect—takes place. Character: A person or animal involved in a story, novel, or play. Characterization: The personality of a character and the method by which an author reveals that personality (through words or actions; by the reaction of others to the character). Chronological order: The time order in which events naturally happen. Cinquain: A five-line poem in which each line tells about the subject of the poem. Climax: In the plot of a story, novel, or play, it is the point of the reader’s highest interest and greatest emotional involvement. Compare and contrast: A similarity (comparison) or difference (contrast) between two or more items. Concrete language: Specific words that appeal to the five senses and are used to create images. Ex: From “Seagulls” by Robert Francis: “Arc intersecting arc, curve over curve” is more visual than “the seagulls are very graceful.” Concrete poem: A poem shaped to look like its subject. Ex: A Tree Stands in the forest Where no one can hear it when it Falls to the ground. The winter snow covers the Tree And Lets It Sleep Conflict: A part of the plot of a story, novel, or play that is the struggle between two or more opposing forces. External conflict is when a character struggles 2 against an outside force, such as nature, fate, or another person. Internal conflict takes place within a character’s mind. Couplet: Lines rhymed in pairs. Ex: Up in the meadows, rich with corn, Clear in the cool September morn….. Dialect: A special form of speech that belongs to a particular group or region. Ex: Some people think Brooklynites might direct you to “terty-terd and terd avenue.” Dialogue: Conversation between characters in a literary work. Dialogue can advance the plot or reveal the personalities of the characters. Drama: The form of literature that presents a story to be performed for an audience. The written script of a drama contains dialogue—the speeches of the characters—and stage directions—the writer’s descriptions of settings, characters, and actions. Elegy: A sad poem or a poem written for someone who has died. Exposition: (1) A type of writing (expository) that presents facts or explains ideas; (2) the introduction of a plot line in which the setting, characters, and conflict are introduced to the reader. Fable: A brief folk tale told to teach a moral or lesson. Often, the characters are animals. Fairy tale: An imaginary story about fairies, elves, magical deeds, giants, etc. Fantasy: Fictional events and details could not occur in real life. The opposite of fantasy is reality, which in a written work consists of details that seem true to life. Fiction: Literature that narrates imaginary events and portrays imaginary characters. Types of fiction include short stories, novels, romance, and fantasy. Figure of speech: Words or phrases that have meaning different from literal meaning, such as idioms, metaphors, and similes. Ex: It’s raining cats and dogs. 3 Figurative language: Imaginative language that is used for descriptive effect and not meant to be taken as the literal truth. Instances of figurative language include idioms, similes, metaphors, and hyperboles. Flashback: In a narrative, a scene or incident that breaks the normal time order of the plot to show an event that happened earlier. Folktale: An old story that was originally told orally, or by word of mouth, passed down from generation to generation. Foreshadowing: The use of clues by a writer to prepare the reader for future developments in a story, novel, or play. Free verse: Poetry that is unrhymed and arranged in lines and phrases with uneven meter. Genre: A type or form of literary text. Genre categories can be hugely broad, like fiction or nonfiction, or they can be narrow, like sonnet. Each genre has specific characteristics, such as poetry. Haiku: A three line poem, usually on the subject of nature, with five syllables in the first and third lines, and seven syllables in the second line. Historical fiction: A genre in which the story is based on actual historic events but the characters or situations are fictitious. Hyperbole: A form of figurative language that expresses an exaggeration. Imagery: Language that appeals to the senses because it uses words to create a picture or likeness for the reader. Index: An alphabetical table of contents in a book, often found in the back of the book. Irony: A difference between the way things seem to be and the way they actually are. It is often a “twist of fate,” in that the thing you expect to happen does not actually happen; rather, the opposite of what you expect to happen often does. Limerick: A humorous five-line poem that follows a specific form: three long lines (1, 2, and 5) that rhyme, and two short lines (3 and 4) that rhyme. The rhyme scheme would be A, A, B, B, A. 4 Lyric poem: A poem that expresses a personal thought or emotion. Most are short and present vivid images. Metamorphosis: A change in shape or form. Often found in Greek myths as when one thing is transformed into another. Metaphor: A figure of speech that compares or equates two basically different things. Mood: The dominant emotion expressed in a piece of writing (sorrow, happiness). Often the tone is implied by the writer while the mood is inferred by the reader. Moral: The lesson that the story or fable teaches. Myth: An ancient, anonymous story that conveys the beliefs and ideals of a culture and usually involves gods and goddesses. Myths originally explained an aspect of nature or of human life. Narrative: A type of writing that tells a story. A narrative work may be either fiction or nonfiction. Types of narrative writing include autobiographies, biographies, short stories, novels, and narrative poems. Narrative poem: A poem that tells a story. The events are often told in chronological order. Narrator: In a short story or novel, the person who tells the story. A first-person narrator is a character in the work who tells the story as he or she experiences it. A third-person narrator is an outside observer—not a character in the story—who describes the thought and experiences of the characters. Third person limited is where the narrator usually focuses on just one or none of the characters, but third person omniscient (all knowing) is where the narrator knows the feelings and thoughts of all the characters. Nonfiction: Factual prose writing. Nonfiction always tells about incidents that really happened and people who really lived. Nonfiction includes autobiography, biography, essays, reviews, articles, etc. Novel: Long work of prose that tells a story. Ode: A poem written in praise of someone or something. 5 Onomatopoeia: The use of a word or phrase that imitates or suggests the sound of what it describes. (ex: gobble, buzz, pop, tick tock, clippety-clop). Opinion: A statement expressing an individual’s personal belief. An opinion is not a fact, which is a statement that can be proven true. Usually words like best, interesting, pretty, bad, or terrible express one’s opinion. Oral tradition: The handing down of songs, poems, legends, and folk tales from generation to generation by word of mouth. Oxymoron: Expression with opposite contradictory words. (ex.: jumbo shrimp, cold sun). Paraphrase: A restatement in the reader’s own words of the content of a written work. By paraphrasing a written work, a reader can gain a better understanding of the writer’s meaning. Personification: The linking of human quality or ability to an animal, an object, or an idea. (ex: The wind whispered through the night. The trees danced in the breeze.) Persuasion: Persuasive writing is a type of writing in which an author attempts to make the reader accept an opinion or take action of some kind. A newspaper editorial is an example of persuasive writing. Plot: The sequence of events in a short story, novel, or play. The plot is the entire action of the story, including the exposition (we are introduced to the characters and setting), rising action, where the conflict (struggle between opposing forces) develops, climax (the point of the reader’s highest interest or the turning point), the falling action (where the conflict begins to resolve), and the resolution (reveals the final outcome of the plot). Poetry: Imaginative writing in which language, sound, images, and rhythm combine to create a special emotional effect. Poetry is usually arranged in lines. Point of view: (POV) The relationship of the storyteller, or narrator, to the story. First person point of view is told by a character. This character speaks directly to us and refers to himself/herself as “I.” A story told from the third person point of view is told by the author. The author acts as narrator, or storyteller, who stands outside the story. This narrator, who is not a character, refers to all the characters as “he” or “she.” 6 Prose: The kind of writing that is used in short stories, novels, works of nonfiction, journalism, etc. Prose is distinguished from poetry. Unlike poetry, prose is written in lines that run from margin to margin across a page. Prose is also divided into sentences and paragraphs and is more like everyday speech than poetry. Proverb: A saying that is generally believed to be true. (ex: “Silence is golden.” “A stitch in time saves nine.”) Protagonist: The central figure in a literary work. Refrain: In some songs or poems, a line or group of lines repeated at regular intervals. Repetition: The repeated use of sounds, words, phrases, or lines. Repetition emphasizes important items and helps unify a poem or other work of literature. Resolution: In a story, novel, or play, the part of the plot that presents the final outcome. Rhyme: The repetition of the same or similar sounds in words that appear near each other in a poem. The most common type of rhyme is end rhyme, which occurs at the end of the lines of a poem. Rhyme scheme is the pattern of the rhymes within a poem. Rhythm: The pattern of beats made by stress and unstressed syllables in the lines of a poem. A poem’s rhythm usually reflects its meaning. For instance, a fast rhythm fits a poem of action, while a slower rhythm is appropriate in a poem that expresses a calm feeling. Rhythm may be regular and follow a repeated pattern, or it may be irregular. Scanning: A method of reading in which the reader searches quickly through a work for a particular word, phrase, or piece of information. Setting: The time and place in which a story, novel, or play occurs. Setting may be directly stated, where the reader is told when and where the story takes place, or it may be implied, where clues are given to help the reader establish where and when the story is taking place. Short story: A genre in fiction in which a story is told in a brief narrative. Most short stories have one or more characters and happen in a particular time and place. The plot is the sequence of events in the story. 7 Simile: A figure of speech that uses the words like or as to directly compare two seemingly unlike things. Skimming: A method of reading in which the reader glances quickly through a written work in order to preview it. The reader skims through a written work by noting the title, table of contents, headings, any boldfaces or italicized terms, and illustrations (text features). Sonnet: A fourteen-line poem that is reflective in nature. Stage directions: In drama, a writer’s instructions for performing the work and descriptions of characters, actions, and settings. Staging: The acting, costumes, sets, lighting, sound effects, and other special effects that bring a play to life. Stanza: A group of lines forming a unit in a poem. Stereotype: A kind of character who has only a few personality traits and is more a category than a real, individualized person. Stereotypes are sometimes used in literature to teach a lesson or make a point. Suspense: The reader’s interest in the outcome of a work of literature. Symbol: A word or object that stands for something else. (ex: The color green is a symbol for jealousy; the flag is a symbol of a country.) Theme: The central idea of a literary work, usually expressed as a generalization about life. A stated theme is one that the author expresses directly in the work. An implied theme is one that is not stated directly in the work but is suggested by the work’s other elements. Thesis statement: A sentence or group of sentences expressing the central idea in a work of nonfiction. The material that follows the thesis statement supports and develops it with facts, incidents, examples, and details. Title: The name of a work of literature. The title sometimes refers to an important character or event or provides a clue to the main idea. Tone: The author’s attitude toward his subject (humorous, ironic, approving, condemning). 8 Topic sentence: The sentence that expresses the main idea of a paragraph of nonfiction. Voice: The usually unmentioned person who is telling the story. Also, the sense that the reader gets about the person who is telling the story. 9