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“L to J” Literary Terms Part 2. Roll the dice… ABCDE FGHIJ KLMNO PQRST UVWXY.

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Presentation on theme: "“L to J” Literary Terms Part 2. Roll the dice… ABCDE FGHIJ KLMNO PQRST UVWXY."— Presentation transcript:

1 “L to J” Literary Terms Part 2

2 Roll the dice… ABCDE FGHIJ KLMNO PQRST UVWXY

3 A When the same consonant sound from the beginning of a word is repeated often in a piece of writing. Alliteration

4 B A division or type of literature. The most common three are poetry, prose, and drama. Genre

5 C A figure of speech that uses like or as to compare two unlike ideas. Simile

6 D When a reader uses details and clues from sentences surrounding an unknown word to figure out it’s definition. Context clues

7 E Makes a comparison between two or more things that are similar in some ways but otherwise unalike. Analogy

8 F The set of ideas that are associated with a word in addition to it’s meaning.  Example: “Vacation Spot” would be one for the word “beach” Connotation

9 G When an author makes a reference to a well-known person, event, place, literary work, or work of art in their writing. Allusion

10 H A group of lines of poetry that are usually similar in length and pattern and are separated by spaces. Stanza

11 I When the same vowel sound is repeated in multiple words in a sentence and/or phrase. Assonance

12 J Part of a writer’s style that includes their choices of words and how they put those words together. Two popular descriptions are formal and informal. Diction

13 K The rhyming pattern in a poem. Meter

14 L A brief story about an interesting, amusing, or strange event. Writers often use this to make a point or simply to entertain the reader. Anecdote

15 M An expression or figure of speech that has a meaning to a particular language or region. Idiom

16 N A type of figurative language in which a non-human subject is given human characteristics. Personification

17 0 The form of a language spoken by a particular region or group. For example, American English vs. British English. Dialect

18 P A form of poetry that comes from Japan and is only three lines long. Haiku

19 Q A contradiction between what happens and what is expected to happen. Example: I wore a dress for my date, and he took me through a McDonald’s drive-through. Irony

20 R A type of figurative language in which something is described as though it were something else. Metaphor

21 S A word that imitates a sound. Some examples are crash, bang, and buzz. Onomatopoeia

22 T The perspective from which a story is told. Point-of-view

23 U A regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem. Examples: abab, aabbaabb, abac Rhyme Scheme

24 V A conversation between characters. The exact words and phrases being said are often times put in quotation marks. Dialogue

25 W Writing or speech that appeals to one or more of the five senses. Sensory Language

26 X A genre of literature that is composed of musical and emotionally charged language. Imagery, figurative language, and rhyming are used often in this type of writing. Poetry

27 Y The use of representations in writing for ideas than an author chooses to high-light or give deeper meaning to. Symbolism


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