PPT-Literary Terms
Author : mitsue-stanley | Published Date : 2016-08-14
By Ms Ibsen Literary Terms of Dramatic Importance Character Theme Mood and Plot Character Protagonist Central characters Round Develop complex Not always good
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Literary Terms: Transcript
By Ms Ibsen Literary Terms of Dramatic Importance Character Theme Mood and Plot Character Protagonist Central characters Round Develop complex Not always good or narrator Follow and cheer for them. Critical reading: psychoanalytical, . marxist. , feminist. LQ: Can I compare poems . thematically while . analysing. language form and structure?. Literary terms: Juxtaposition, assonance, alliteration, onomatopoeia, internal rhyme, caesura, crescendo, bathos, pathos, satirical, misogyny. 2014-2015. Alliteration. stylistic device in which a number of words, having the same first consonant sound, occur close together in a . series. “From forth the fatal loins of these two foes. ; A . Motif . - . A . recurring element, such as a type of incident, a device, . an image, or reference, . which appears frequently . in a work . of literature. .. Symbol. - . a word, place, character, or object that means something beyond what it is on a literal . Vocab, & Grammar: . Practice AP Test #1. Multiple Choice. Do You Know:. PARALLELISM. Rhetorical and Literary Terms. PARALLELISM. is recurrent syntactical similarity. Several parts of a sentence or several sentences are expressed similarly to show that the ideas in the parts or sentences are equal in importance. Parallelism also adds balance and rhythm and, most importantly, clarity to the sentence.. : . TKAM. and Beyond. Please copy the following notes into the Class Notes section of your notebook.. Simile. A . figure of speech that says that one thing is like another different thing. We can use similes to make descriptions more emphatic or vivid.. You need to keep up with your . Vocabulary Notebook. . Don’t lose your terms! You might be able to use them – . be RESPONSIBLE!!. We will use the following terms:. Character Antagonist Protagonist. Literary: anything having to do with written works (books, poems, stories…). Literary Genres. Literary: anything having to do with written works (books, poems, stories…). Genres: this is where books are sorted and divided by different topics, areas, departments, subjects or . EXTEND your Learning @ Bishop Justus . Year . 10 . ~ Macbeth 21. Murder and . consequeneces. LQ: how does Shakespeare use language and form to reveal Macbeth’s troubled mind?. LQ: . H. ow . does Shakespeare use language and form to reveal Macbeth’s troubled mind?. Tragedy:. A play in which a main character suffers a downfall as a result of outside forces or flaw. . Tragic flaw. : personality trait that leads to the downfall of the hero. en media res: (. Latin for “in the middle of things”) when the story starts in the middle of events, flashes back, then picks back up in real time. Figurative Language . Describing something by comparing it with something else. Any language that goes beyond the literal meaning of words in order to furnish new effects or fresh insights into an idea or a subject.. You Will need:. Loose leaf paper. Note-taking tools. Objectives. Understand the terms used when reading/performing a play. Analyze the difference between a play and other works of fiction. Review literary terms that were learned previously. Literary Terms and Examples Symbolism: Using a symbol- a word or object that stands for an idea. What’s your example?? Foreshadowing: hints and clues that tip the reader off as to what is to come later in the work Figurative language. language that represents one thing in terms of something dissimilar (non-literal language). . Includes simile, metaphor, personification, hyperbole, symbol). conflict. struggle between two or more opposing forces (person vs. person; nature; society; self; fate/God) . External Conflict A character struggles with a force outside him/herself Five categories of conflict - person against nature 2 person against self 3 person against supernatural technology
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