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Literary Terms Poetry.

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Presentation on theme: "Literary Terms Poetry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Literary Terms Poetry

2 Alliteration The practice of beginning several consecutive or neighboring words with the same sound. “The twisting trout twinkled below.”

3 Allusion A reference to a mythological, literary, or historic person, place, or thing. “He met his Waterloo.”

4 Assonance The repetition of accented vowel sounds in a series of words. The words “cry” and “side” have the same vowel sound, so if you used them together they would be in assonance.

5 Consonance The repetition of a consonant sound within a series of words to produce a harmonious effect. “And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.” The “d” sound is in consonance as well as the “s” sound.

6 Connotation The ideas, feelings, and images associated with a word in addition to its literal meaning The connotation may be personal Or cultural – these are often recognized by most people in a cultural group

7 Denotation A word’s dictionary definition, independent of other associations a word may have.

8 Denote vs. Connote “cheap” means “low in cost”
But its connotation may be “stingy” or “poorly made” “hot” means a temp higher than a human body “hot” connotes something far different when you say someone IS hot.

9 Diction The manner in which we express words and the wording used
Diction = enunciation

10 Hyperbole A deliberate, extravagant, and often outrageous exaggeration. “The shot heard ‘round the world.”

11 Imagery Words or phrases a writer uses to represent persons, objects, actions, feelings, and ideas descriptively by appealing to the five senses.

12 Irony Verbal is meaning one thing while saying another (see sarcasm)
Situational is when the outcome is far different from the setup suggests Dramatic is when we learn/know something the characters don’t figure out!

13 Metaphor A comparison of two unlike things not using “like” or “as.”
“Time is money.” “Every rose has its thorns”

14 Mood The atmosphere or predominant emotion in a literary work.

15 Motivation A circumstance or set of circumstances that prompts a character to act in a certain way or that determines the outcome of a situation or work.

16 Onomatopoeia The use of words that mimic the sounds they describe. When onomatopoeia is used on an extended scale in a poem, it is called imitative harmony. “Hiss,” “buzz,” and “bang.”

17 Oxymoron A form of paradox that combines a pair of opposite terms into a single unusual expression. “sweet sorrow” or “cold fire”

18 Paradox When the elements of a statement contradict each other. Although the statement may appear illogical, impossible, or absurd, it turns out to have a coherent meaning that reveals a hidden truth. “Much madness is divinest sense.”

19 Personification A kind of metaphor that gives inanimate objects or abstract ideas human characteristics. “The wind cried in the dark.”

20 Pun A play on words that are identical or similar in sound but have a sharply diverse meanings. When Mercutio is bleeding to death in Romeo and Juliet, he says to his friends, “Ask for me tomorrow, and you shall find a grave man.”

21 Rhyme The repetition of sounds in two or more words or phrases that appear close to each other in a poem. End Rhyme, Internal Rhyme, and Slant Rhyme are all different types of rhyme.

22 Sarcasm The use of verbal irony in which a person appears to be praising something but is actually insulting it. “As I fell down the stairs headfirst, I heard her say, ‘Look at that coordination.’”

23 Shift or Turn The change or movement in a piece resulting from epiphany, realization, or insight gained by the speaker, a character, or the reader.

24 Simile A comparison of two different things or ideas through the use of the words “like” or “as.” “The warrior fought like a lion.”

25 Symbol Any object, person, place, or action that has both a meaning in itself and that stands for something larger than itself, such as a quality, attitude, belief, or value. The land turtle in Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wraith suggests or reflects the toughness and resilience of the migrant workers.

26 Theme The central message of a literary work, which can be expressed in a word or two: courage, survival, war, pride, etc.

27 Tone The writer’s or speaker’s attitude toward a subject, character, or audience and it is conveyed through the author’s choice of words and detail.

28 Understatement The opposite of hyperbole. It is a kind of irony that deliberately represents something as being much less than it really is. “I could probably manage to survive on a salary of two million dollars per year.”


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