Circumlocution: a roundabout or evasive speech or writing,
in which many words are used but a few would have served
Classicism: art, literature, and music reflecting the
principles of ancient Greece and Rome: tradition, reason, clarity, order, and
balance
Cliché: a phrase or situation overused within society
Climax: the decisive point in a narrative or drama; the pint
of greatest intensity or interest at which plot question is answered or
resolved
Colloquialism: folksy speech, slang words or phrases usually
used in informal conversation
Comedy: originally a nondramatic literary piece of work that
was marked by a happy ending; now a term to describe a ludicrous, farcical, or
amusing event designed provide enjoyment or produce smiles and laughter
Conflict: struggle or problem in a story causing tension
Connotation: implicit meaning, going beyond dictionary
definition
Contrast: a rhetorical device by which one element (idea or
object) is thrown into opposition to another for the sake of emphasis or
clarity
Denotation: plain dictionary definition
Denouement (pronounced day-new-mahn): loose ends tied up in
a story after the climax, closure, conclusion
Dialect: the language of a particular district, class or
group of persons; the sounds, grammar, and diction employed by people
distinguished from others.
Dialectics: formal debates usually over the nature of truth.
Dichotomy: split or break between two opposing things.
Diction: the style of speaking or writing as reflected in
the choice and use of words.
Didactic: having to do with the transmission of information;
education.
Dogmatic: rigid in beliefs and principles.
Elegy: a mournful, melancholy poem, especially a funeral
song or lament for the dead, sometimes contains general reflections on death,
often with a rural or pastoral setting.
Epic: a long narrative poem unified by a hero who reflects
the customs, mores, and aspirations of his nation of race as he makes his way
through legendary and historic exploits, usually over a long period of time
(definition bordering on circumlocution).
Epigram: witty aphorism.
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Exposition: beginning of a story that sets forth facts, ideas, and/or characters, in a detailed explanation.
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Interior Monologue: a form of writing which represents the
inner thoughts of a character; the recording of the internal, emotional
experience(s) of an individual; generally the reader is given the impression of
overhearing the interior monologue.
Inversion: words out of order for emphasis.
Juxtaposition: the intentional placement of a word, phrase,
sentences of paragraph to contrast with another nearby.
Lyric: a poem having musical form and quality; a short
outburst of the author’s innermost thoughts and feelings.
Magic(al) Realism: a
genre developed in Latin America which juxtaposes the everyday with the marvelous or magical.
Metaphor(extended, controlling, and mixed): an analogy that
compare two different
things imaginatively.
Extended: a metaphor that is extended or developed as far as
the writer
wants to take it.
Controlling: a metaphor that runs throughout the piece of
work.
Mixed: a metaphor that ineffectively blends two or more
analogies.
Metonymy: literally
“name changing” a device of figurative language in which the name of an
attribute or associated thing is substituted for the usual name of a thing.
Mode of Discourse:
argument (persuasion), narration, description, and exposition.
Modernism: literary
movement characterized by stylistic experimentation, rejection of tradition,
interest in symbolism and psychology
Monologue: an
extended speech by a character in a play, short story, novel, or narrative
poem.
Mood: the
predominating atmosphere evoked by a literary piece.
Motif: a recurring
feature (name, image, or phrase) in a piece of literature.
Myth: a story, often
about immortals, and sometimes connected with religious rituals, that attempts
to give meaning to the mysteries of the world.
Narrative: a story or
description of events.
Narrator: one who narrates,
or tells, a story.
Naturalism: extreme form of realism.
Novelette/Novella: short story; short prose narrative, often
satirical.
Omniscient Point of View:
knowing all things, usually the third person.
Onomatopoeia: use of a word whose sound in some degree
imitates or suggests its
meaning.
Oxymoron: a figure of speech in which two contradicting
words or phrases are combined to produce a rhetorical effect by means of a
concise paradox.
Pacing: rate of
movement; tempo.
Parable: a story
designed to convey some religious principle, moral lesson, or general truth.
Paradox: a statement
apparently self-contradictory or absurd but really containing a possible truth;
an opinion contrary to generally accepted ideas.
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