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LITERARY TERMS for AP ENGLISH LITERATURE

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AllegoryThe representation of abstract ideas or principles by characters, figures, or events in
narrative, dramatic, or pictorial form.
Alliosis-

Presenting alternatives: "You can eat well or you can sleep well." While such a structure
often results in the logical fallacy of the false dichotomy or the either/or fallacy, it can
create a cleverly balanced and artistic sentence.

Alliteration-

The repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of several words in a line
of poetry. ie.Marilyn Monroe

Ambiguity-

When an author leaves out details/information or is unclear about an event so the reader
will use his/her imagination to fill in the blanks.

Anacoluthon-

Disruption of syntax to create intensity, excitement, confusion. Swear here as before


that you never shall note that you know aught of me.

Anadiplosis-

Repeating the last word of a clause at the beginning of the next clause. As Nietzsche
said, "Talent is an adornment; an adornment is also a concealment."

Anaphora-

Repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive lines in a poem.

Anapodoton-

Deliberately creating a sentence fragment by the omission of a clause: "If only you came
with me!" If only students knew what anapodoton was! Good writers never use sentence
fragments? Ah, but they can. And they do. When appropriate.

Anecdote-

A short story or joke told at the beginning of a speech to gain the audiences attention.

Antagonist-

The protagonists adversary.

Antanaclasis-

The stylistic scheme of repeating a single word, but with a different meaning each time.
From Shakespeare: "for many a thousand widows/ Shall this his mock mock out of their
dear husbands; Mock mothers from their sons, mock castles down."

Anti-climatic-

When the ending of the plot in poetry or prose is unfulfilling or lackluster.

Antimetabole-

Repetition in reverse order: "One should eat to live, not live to eat." Or, "You like it; it
likes you." The witches in Macbeth chant, "Fair is foul and foul is fair."

Aposiopesis-

A figure of speech wherein a sentence is deliberately broken off and left unfinished, the
ending to be supplied by the imagination, giving an impression of unwillingness or
inability to continue. An example would be the threat "Get out, or else!" This device
often portrays its users as overcome with passion (fear, anger, excitement) or modesty.

Apostrophe-

When a character speaks to a character or object that is not present or is unable to


respond.

Asyndeton

Using no conjunctions to create an effect of speed or simplicity: Veni. Vidi. Vici. "I came.
I saw. I conquered." (As opposed to "I came, and then I saw, and then I conquered.")
Been there. Done that. Bought the t-shirt.

Assonance-

The repetition of the same vowel sound in a phrase or line of poetry.

Blank verseare

Name for unrhymed iambic pentameter. An iamb is a metrical foot in which an


unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed syllable. In iambic pentameter there
five iambs per line making ten syllables.

Climax-

The turning point in the plot or the high point of action.

Colloquial-

Informal, conversational language. Colloquialisms are phrases or sayings that are


indicative of a specific region.

Connotation-

An idea or meaning suggested by or associated with a word or thing, ie. Bat=evil.

Convention-

An understanding between a reader and a writer about certain details of a story that
does not need to be explained.

Consonance-

The repetition of consonant sounds in a phrase or line of poetry. The consonant sound
may be at the beginning, middle, or end of the word.

Contraction-

Removes an unstressed syllable and in order to maintain the rhythmic meter of a line.
This practice explains some words frequently used in poetry such as th in place of the,
oer in place of over, and tis or twas in place of it is or it was.

Couplet-

Two rhyming lines in poetry.

Deus ex machina-

Term that refers to a character or force that appears at the end of a story or play to help
resolve conflict. Word means god from a machine. In ancient Greek drama,
gods were
lowered onto the stage by a mechanism to extricate characters from a
seemingly
hopeless situation. The phrase has come to mean any turn of
events that solve the
characters problems through an unexpected and unlikely
intervention.
Diction-

Word choice or the use of words in speech or writing.

Denouement-

The final resolution or clarification of a dramatic or narrative plot.

DoppelgangerRobert Louis

The alter ego of a character-the suppressed side of ones personality that is usually
unaccepted by society. ie. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by
Stevenson- Mr. Edward Hyde (hide) is Dr.Jekylls evil side

Elegy-

A poem or song composed especially as a lament for a deceased person.

Ellipsis-

Omitting a word implied by the previous clause: "The European soldiers killed six of the
remaining villagers, the American soldiers, eight."

Emotive language-

Deliberate use of language by a writer to instill a feeling or visual.

Enallage-

Intentionally misusing grammar to characterize a speaker or to create a memorable


phrase. Boxing manager Joe Jacobs, for instance, became immortal with the phrase,
"We was robbed!" Or, the editors of Punch magazine might tell their British readers, "You
pays your money, and you takes your chances."

Enjambment-

The continuation of reading one line of a poem to the next with no pause, a run-on line.

Epanalepsis-

Repeating a word from the beginning of a clause at the end of the clause: "Year chases
year." Or "Man's inhumanity to man." As Voltaire reminds us, "Common sense is not so
common." As Shakespeare chillingly phrases it, "Blood will have blood."

Epic-

An extended narrative poem in elevated or dignified language, celebrating the feats of a


legendary or traditional hero. Your weekend, dude. BARF.

Epilogue-

A short poem or speech spoken directly to the audience following the conclusion of a
play, or in a novel the epilogue is a short explanation at the end of the book
indicates what happens after the plot ends.
Sudden enlightenment or realization, a profound new outlook or understanding about the
world usually attained while doing everyday mundane activities.

which
EpiphanyEpistolary-

Used to describe a novel that tells its story through letters written from one character to
another. (Perks of Being a Wallflower)

Epistrophe-

Repetition of a concluding word or endings: "He's learning fast; are you earning fast?"
When the epistrophe focuses on sounds rather than entire words, we normally call it
rhyme.

Euphemism-

The act of substituting a harsh, blunt, or offensive comment for a more politically
accepted or positive one.(short=vertically challenged)

Euphony-

A succession of words which are pleasing to the ear. These words may be alliterative,
utilize consonance, or assonance and are often used in poetry but also seen in

prose.
Expansion-

Adds an unstressed syllable and in order to maintain the rhythmic meter of a line. This
practice explains some words frequently used in poetry such as th in place of the, oer in
place of over, and tis or twas in place of it is or it was.

Fable-

A usually short narrative making an edifying or cautionary point and often employing as
characters animals that speak and act like humans.

Feminine ending-

Term that refers to an unstressed extra syllable at the end of a line of iambic
pentameter.

Figurative language- Speech or writing that departs from literal meaning in order to achieve a special effect
or meaning. Speech or writing employing figures of speech.
Flashback-

When a character remembers a past event that is relevant to the current action of the
story

Flat character-

A literary character whose personality can be defined by one or two traits and does not
change over the course of the story. Flat characters are usually minor or
characters.

insignificant
Foil-

A character that by contrast underscores or enhances the distinctive characteristics of


another.

Folklore-

The traditional beliefs, myths, tales, and practices of a people, transmitted orally.

Foot-

The metrical length of a line is determined by the number of feet it contains.


Monometer: One foot
Dimeter: Two feet
Trimeter: Three feet
Tetrameter: Four feet
Pentameter: Five feet
Hexameter: Six feet
Heptameter: Seven feet

Iamb-

The most common feet have two to three syllables, with one stressed.
An iambic foot has two syllables. The first is unstressed and the second is stressed. The
iambic foot is most common in English poetry.

Trochee-

A trochaic foot has two syllables. The first is stressed and the second is unstressed.

Dactyl-

A dactylic foot has three syllables beginning with a stressed syllable; the other two
unstressed.

Anapest-

An anapestic foot has three syllables. The first two are unstressed with the third
stressed.

Foreshadowing-

Clues in the text about incidents that will occur later in the plot, foreshadowing creates
anticipation in the novel.

Free verse-

Type of verse that contains a variety of line lengths, is unrhymed, and lacks traditional
meter.

Genre-

A category of artistic composition, as in music or literature, marked by a distinctive style,


form, or content.

Gothic novel-

A genre of fiction characterized by mystery and supernatural horror, often set in a dark
castle or other medieval setting.

Hendiadys-

The expression of an idea by the use of usually two independent words connected by
and (as nice and warm) instead of the usual combination of independent word and its
modifier (as nicely warm).

Heroine-

A woman noted for courage and daring action or the female protagonist.

Hubris-

Used in Greek tragedies, refers to excessive pride that usually leads to a heros
downfall.

Hypallage-

also known as a transferred epithet, is the trope in which a modifier, usually an adjective,
is applied to the "wrong" word in the sentence. The word whose modifier is thus
displaced can either be actually present in the sentence, or it can be implied logically.
The effect often stresses the emotions or feelings of the individual by expanding them on
to the environment. Ex: restless night, clumsy helmet, happy morning.

Hyperbaton-

A generic term for changing the normal or expected order of words. "One ad does not a
survey make." The term comes from the Greek for "overstepping" because one or more
words "overstep" their normal position and appear elsewhere. For instance, Milton in
Paradise Lost might write, "High on a throne of royal gold . . . Satan exalted sat." In
normal, everyday speech, we would expect to find, "High on a throne of royal gold . . .
Satan sat exalted."

Hyperbole-

A figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or comic/dramatic effect.

Illocution-

Language that avoids meaning of the words. When we speak, sometimes we conceal
intentions or side step the true subject of a conversation. Writing illocution
expresses two
stories, one of which is not apparent to the characters, but is apparent to
the reader. For
example, if two characters are discussing a storm on the surface it
may seem like a
simple discussion of the weather, however, the reader should
interpret the underlying
meaning-that the relationship is in turmoil, chaos, is
unpredictable. As demonstrated the
story contains an underlying meaning or parallel
meanings.

ImageryIn medias res-

The use of vivid or figurative language to represent objects, actions, or ideas.


A story that begins in the middle of things.

Inversion-

In poetry is an intentional digression from ordinary word order which is used to maintain
regular meters. For example, rather than saying the rain came a poem may say
the rain. Meters can be formed by the insertion or absence of a pause.

came
Ironyeverywhere and

When one thing should occur, is apparent, or in logical sequence but the opposite
actually occurs. Example: A man in the ocean might say, Water, water
not a drop to drink.
Dramatic Irony: When the audience or reader knows something characters do
not know
Verbal Irony: When one thing is said, but something else, usually the opposite, is
meant
Cosmic Irony: When a higher power toys with human expectations

Litotes-

A form of understatement where an idea is expressed by the negation of its opposite.


Not bad means good. Not displeasing to the eye means Freeburg. Not unkind
means kind.

Masculine ending-

Stressed extra syllable at the end of a line.

Memoir-

An account of the personal experiences of an author.

Meter-

The measured arrangement of words in poetry, as by accentual rhythm, syllabic


quantity, or the number of syllables in a line.

Metaphor-

A figure of speech in which a word or phrase that ordinarily designates one thing is used
to designate another, thus making an implicit comparison; this comparison does
like or as.

not use
Metaplasmus-

A type of neologism in which misspelling a word creates a rhetorical effect. To


emphasize dialect, one might spell dog as "dawg." To emphasize that something is
unimportant, we might add -let or -ling at the end of the word, referring to a deity as a
"godlet", or a prince as a "princeling." To emphasize the feminine nature of something
normally considered masculine, try adding -ette to the end of the word, creating a
smurfette or a corvette. To modernize something old, the writer might turn the Greek god
Hermes into the Hermenator. Likewise, Austin Powers renders all things shagedelic. The
categories following this entry are subdivisions of metaplasmus:

Prosthesis -- adding an extra syllable or letters to the beginning of a word:


Shakespeare writes in his sonnets, "All alone, I beweep my outcast state." He
could have simply wrote weep, but beweep matches his meter and is more
poetic. Too many students are all afrightened by the use of prosthesis. Prosthesis
creates a poetic effect, turning a run-of-the-mill word into something novel.

Epenthesis (also called infixation) -- adding an extra syllable or letters in the


middle of a word. Shakespeare might write, "A visitating spirit came last night" to
highlight the unnatural status of the visit. More prosaically, Ned Flanders from
The Simpsons might say, "Gosh-diddly-darn-it, Homer."

Proparalepsis -- adding an extra syllable or letters to the end of a word. For


instance, Shakespeare in Hamlet creates the word climature by adding the end
of the word temperature to climate (1.1.12). The wizardly windbag Glyndwr

(Glendower) proclaims that he "can call spirits from the vasty deep" in 1 Henry IV
(3.1.52).

Metonymy-

Aphaearesis -- deleting a syllable from the beginning of a word to create a new


word. For instance, in King Lear, we hear that, "the king hath cause to plain"
(3.1.39). Here, the word complain has lost its first syllable. In Hamlet 2.2.561,
Hamlet asks, "Who should 'scape whipping" if every man were treated as he
deserved, but the e- in escape has itself cleverly escaped from its position!

Syncope -- deleting a syllable or letter from the middle of a word. For instance, in
Cymbeline, Shakespeare writes of how, "Thou thy worldy task hast done, / Home
art gone, and ta'en thy wages" (4.2.258). In 2 Henry IV, we hear a flatterer say,
"Your lordship, though not clean past your youth, hath yet some smack of age in
you, some relish of the saltness of time" (1.2.112). Here, the -i- in saltiness has
vanished to create a new word. Syncope is particularly common in poetry, when
desperate poets need to get rid of a single syllable to make their meter match in
each line.

Apocope -- deleting a syllable or letter from the end of a word. In The Merchant
of Venice, one character says, "when I ope my lips let no dog bark," and the last
syllable of open falls away into ope before the reader's eyes (1.1.93-94). In
Troilus and Cressida, Shakespeare proclaims, "If I might in entreaties find
success--/ As seld I have the chance--I would desire / My famous cousin to our
Grecian tents" (4.5.148). Here the word seldom becomes seld.

The use of a word or phrase to stand in for something else which it is often associated.
ie. Hollywood for US cinema, the Crown for UK government, the White House,

City Hall
Motif-

A dominant theme or central idea repeated throughout a piece.

Narrator-

Someone who tells a story.


First person: The narrator is a character in the story
Third person objective: The narrator does not tell what anyone is thinking; the fly on a
wall
Third person limited: The narrator is able to tell the thoughts of one character
Third person omniscient: The narrator is able to tell the thoughts of any character

Novella-

A short novel usually under 100 pages.

Neutral language-

Language opposite from emotive language as it is literal or even objective in nature.

Oblique rhyme-

Imperfect rhyme scheme.

Occupatio-

Literally "seizing," is the rhetorical figure of bringing up and responding to a counterpoint


before the opponent has the chance to make it. This is as opposed to apophasis, where
the rhetorician feigns unwillingness to discuss a topic he or she is interested in.

Ode-

A lyric poem of some length, usually of a serious or meditative nature and having an
elevated style and formal stanzaic structure. An ode celebrates something. John
is known for writing odes.

Keats
Onomatopoeia-

The formation or use of words such as buzz or murmur that imitate the sounds
associated with the objects or actions they refer to.

Paradox-

Statement which seems to contradict itself. i.e. His old face was youthful when he heard
the news.

Parataxis-

The placing of clauses or phrases one after another without coordinating or


subordinating connectives. Ex: "In the bed of the river there were pebbles and boulders,
dry and white in the sun, and the water was clear and swiftly moving and blue in the
channels."

Parody-

A literary or artistic work that imitates the characteristic style of an author or a work for
comic effect or ridicule. i.e. SNL or Weird Al Yankovich.

Personification-

A figure of speech in which inanimate objects or abstractions are endowed with human
qualities or are represented as possessing human form.

Poetic justice-

The rewarding of virtue and the punishment of vice in the resolution of a plot. The
character, as they say, gets what he/she deserves.

Polysyndeton-

Using many conjunctions to achieve an overwhelming effect: "This term, I am taking


biology and English and history and math and music and physics and sociology." All
those ands make the student sound like she is completely overwhelmed!

Prequel-

A literary, dramatic, or cinematic work whose narrative takes place before that of a
preexisting work or a sequel.

Prologue-

An introduction or preface, especially a poem recited to introduce a play.

Prose-

Ordinary speech or writing without metrical structure, written in paragraph form. Novels
and short stories are referred to as prose.

Protagonist-

The main character in a drama or literary work.

Pun-

Play on words, when two words have multiple meanings and spellings and are used in a
humorous manner.

Rhyme-

The repetition of sounds in words

Rhyme scheme-

The act of assigning letters in the alphabet to demonstrate the rhyming lines in a poem.

Rising action-

The events of a dramatic or narrative plot preceding the climax.

Rites of passage-

An incident which creates tremendous growth signifying a transition from adolescence to


adulthood.

Round character-

A character who is developed over the course of the book, round characters are usually
major characters in a novel. Round characters can also be overweight, like Mr.

Freeburg
Resolution-

Solution to the conflict in literature.

Satire-

Corrective ridicule. A literary work in which human vice or folly is attacked through irony,
derision, or wit; the goal is to change the behavior/issue. Authors known for satires are
Jonathan Swift and George Orwell.

Schemes-

A rhetorical figure of speech which involves changing the order of words in a sentence.
Includes: alliteration, anaphora, antimetabole, asyndeton, polysyndeton, etc.

Simile-

A figure of speech in which two essentially unlike things are compared, often in a phrase
introduced by like or as.

Slang-

A kind of language occurring chiefly in casual and playful speech, made up typically of
short-lived coinages and figures of speech that are deliberately used in place of
terms for added raciness, humor, irreverence, or other effect.

standard
Soliloquy-

A dramatic or literary form of discourse in which a character talks to himself or herself or


reveals his or her thoughts without addressing a listener. Typical in plays.

Sonnet-

A poem with fourteen lines. An Italian sonnet subdivides into two quatrains and two
tercets; while an English sonnet subdivides into three quatrains and one couplet.
is a sudden change of thought which is common in sonnets.

A volta
Speaker-

The voice used by an author to tell a story or speak a poem. The speaker is often a
created identity, and should not automatically be equated with the authors self.

Style-

The combination of distinctive features of literary or artistic expression, execution, or


performance characterizing a particular person, group, school, or era. Mr.
executes Neo-Old Man Style

Freeburg
Symbolism-

Something that represents something else by association, resemblance, or convention,


especially a material object used to represent something invisible.

Symploce-

Repeating words at both the beginning and the ending of a phrase: In St. Paul's letters,
he seeks symploce to reinforce in the reader the fact that his opponents are no better
than he is: "Are they Hebrews? So am I. Are they Israelites? So am I. Are they of the
seed of Abraham? So am I."

Syntax-

The ordering of words into meaningful verbal patterns such as phrases, clauses, and
sentences.

Terza Rima-

An interlocking three-line rhyme scheme: aba, bcb, cdc, ded, etc.

Tragedy-

A drama or literary work in which the main character is brought to ruin or suffers extreme
sorrow, especially as a consequence of a tragic flaw, moral weakness, or inability to
cope with unfavorable circumstances. Mr. Freeburgs social life.

Tropes-

Rhetorical figures of speech in which the word is used in a different way from its
accepted or normal form. Includes: metonymy, synecdoche, metaphor, allegory, irony,
antanaclasis.

Tone-

Reflects how the author feels about the subject matter or the feeling the author wants to
instill in the reader.

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