165
AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP

AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

AP LITERATUREFINAL PREP

Page 2: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Page 3: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

I told you a million times to clean your

room!

Page 4: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Hyperbole/Overstatement: A

figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or

effect; an extravagant statement.

Page 5: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

My love is a red rose.

Page 6: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Metaphor: A figure of speech in which an

implied comparison is made between two

unlike things that actually have

something important in common.

Page 7: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny compared to what lies within

us.

Page 8: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Epistrophe: The repetition of a word or phrase at the end of several clauses.

Page 9: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Romeo tells Mercutio he can’t dance because

he has a “soul of lead”.

Page 10: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Pun: A humorous play on words, using

similar-sounding or identical words to suggest different

meanings.

Page 11: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The wind stood up and gave a shout.

Page 12: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anthropomorphism/Personification: The attribution of human characteristics or behavior to a god, animal, or object.

Page 13: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Francine’s love of sweets was her Achilles heel.

Page 14: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Allusion: A brief, usually indirect

reference to a person, place, or event that

can be real or fictional.

Page 15: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Her hair glistened in the rain like a nose hair after a sneeze.

Page 16: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Simile: A figure of speech in which two fundamentally unlike things are explicitly compared, usually in a phrase introduced by

"like" or "as."

Page 17: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Chicken for dinner? Dinner will be ruined!

Page 18: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anadiplosis: the repetition of the final words of a

sentence or line at the beginning of the

next.

Page 19: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Instead of saying that you feel sad, you say

“I feel blue”.

Page 20: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Idiom: An expression that, while an odd or incorrect use of the

language, has a meaning that is

understood even though it is not clearly

derived from the words that form it.

Page 21: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Appointing a Wall Street insider to

direct the Securities and Exchange

commission is like telling Rush Limbaugh to make sure no one

eats all the Halloween candy.

Page 22: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Analogy: A similarity or comparison between two different things or the relationship

between them.

Page 23: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Hello darkness, my old friend.

I've come to talk with you again.

Page 24: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Apostrophe: The direct address of an absent

or imaginary person or of a personified

abstraction, especially as a

digression in the course of a speech or

composition.

Page 25: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The doctor turned to the nurse and said “Get me his vitals,

STAT!”

Page 26: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Jargon: The specialized language of a professional,

occupational, or other group, often

meaningless to outsiders.

Page 27: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Hope is the thing with feathers

That perches in the soul,

And sings the tune--without the words,

And never stops at all

Page 28: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Extended Metaphor: A comparison between two

unlike things that continues throughout a series of sentences in a paragraph or lines

in a poem.

Page 29: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The green light at the end of Daisy’s dock in

The Great Gatsby.

Page 30: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Symbol: A person, place, action, or thing that (by association,

resemblance, or convention) represents something other than

itself.

Page 31: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

She was upstairs, and her children downstairs.

Page 32: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Zeugma (zoog-mah): The use of a word to

modify or govern two or more words although

its use may be grammatically or

logically correct with only one.

Page 33: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

If he cuts off your leg, it might hurt a

little.

Page 34: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Understatement: A figure of speech in

which a writer deliberately makes a situation seem less important or serious

than it is.

Page 35: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

In Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar,

characters refer to clocks, which did not exist in ancient Rome.

Page 36: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anachronism: A person, scene, event, or other element in a work of literature that fails to correspond with the time or era in which

the work is set.

Page 37: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Sing to me of the man, Muse, the man of twists and turns driven time and again off course, once he had plundered

the hallowed heights of Troy. Many cities of

men he saw and learned their minds, many pains he suffered, heartsick

on the open sea, fighting to save his life and bring his

comrades home.

Page 38: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Invocation: A prayer or statement that

calls for help from a god or goddess.

Page 39: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

One thousand sails pursued Paris as he fled Troy with Helen

by his side.

Page 40: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Synecdoche: A figure of speech in which a

part is used to represent the whole or the whole for a part.

Page 41: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

He’s not unfriendly.

Page 42: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Litotes (lie-toe-tez): A figure of speech consisting of an understatement in

which an affirmative is expressed by

negating its opposite.

Page 43: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

A knave, a rascal, an eater of broken meats;

a base, proud, shallow, beggarly,

three-suited, hundred-pound, filthy worsted-

stocking knave; a lily-livered, action-

taking, whoreson, glass-gazing, super-serviceable, finical rogue; one-trunk-inheriting slave!

Page 44: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Invective: Denunciatory or

abusive language; discourse that casts blame on somebody or

something.

Page 45: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The only thing I know is that I know

nothing.

Page 46: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Paradox: A statement that appears to

contradict itself.

Page 47: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

We saw her duck.

Page 48: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Ambiguity: Multiple meanings, intentional or unintentional, of a word, phrase, sentence

or passage.

Page 49: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

If I said you had a beautiful body, would you hold it against

me?

Page 50: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Double Entendre: A corruption of a French phrase meaning "double meaning,” the term is used to indicate a

word or phrase that is deliberately

ambiguous, especially when one of the

meanings is risqué or improper.

Page 51: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Oh, you are a real genius, that’s what

you are!

Page 52: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Melodramatic Redundancy: An

unnecessary repetition that is exaggerated,

sensational and overly dramatic.

Page 53: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

I am not young enough to know everything.

Page 54: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Epigram: A concise, witty, and thoughtful statement meant to

both amuse and provoke further thought.

Page 55: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The good guys wear white hats, the bad

guys wear black hats.

Page 56: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Archetype: A theme, motif, symbol, or

stock character that holds a familiar place

in a culture’s consciousness.

Page 57: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The critics had a tremendous thirst to

view his latest paintings.

Page 58: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Synesthesia: A psychological process whereby one kind of sensory stimulus

evokes the subjective experience of another.

Page 59: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Pleasure's a sin, and sometimes sin's a

pleasure.

Page 60: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Chiasmus: A figure of speech in which the

order of the terms in the first of two

parallel clauses is reversed in the second

Page 61: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

I knew enough to realize that the

alligators were in the swamp and that it was time to circle the

wagons.

Page 62: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Mixed Metaphor: A figure of speech

combining inconsistent or incongruous metaphors.

Page 63: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

We shall fight on the beaches, we shall

fight on the landing grounds, we shall

fight in the fields and in the streets, we

shall fight in the hills.

Page 64: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anaphora: The repetition of the same word or phrase at the

beginning of successive clauses or

verses.

Page 65: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Saying “big boned” instead of “fat”

Page 66: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Euphemism: The substitution of an

inoffensive term for one considered

offensively explicit.

Page 67: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Save me a sniff of that sweet scented

stuff.

Page 68: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Alliteration: The repetition of an initial consonant

sound.

Page 69: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The crown carries many responsibilities.

Page 70: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Metonymy: A figure of speech in which one word or phrase is substituted for

another with which it is closely associated.

Page 71: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Jumbo shrimp

Page 72: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Oxymoron: A figure of speech in which incongruous or

contradictory terms appear side by side.

Page 73: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Next time, there won’t be a next time.

Page 74: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Epanalepsis: The repetition at the end of a clause of the

word that occurred at the beginning of the clause; it tends to make the sentence or clause in which it occurs stand apart

from its surroundings.

Page 75: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

In The Scarlet Letter, characters, objects

and events often serve as references to the conflict between the world of man and the

world of God.

Page 76: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Allegory: Extending a metaphor so that

objects, persons, and actions in a text are equated with meanings that lie outside the

text.

Page 77: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

A cruel wind blew through the town.

Page 78: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Pathetic Fallacy: Ascribes human

feelings to nature or nonhuman objects.

Page 79: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Live and learn.

Page 80: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Cliché: A phrase, idea, or image that

has been used so much that it has lost much

of its original meaning, impact, and

freshness.

Page 81: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Early to bed, early to rise, makes a man

healthy, wealthy and wise.

Page 82: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Aphorism: A terse statement which

expresses a general truth or moral principle.

Page 83: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

TYPES OF SENTENCES/WRITING

STYLES

Page 84: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Come up to my desk, please.

Page 85: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Imperative Sentence: A sentence that gives a command or makes a

request. Usually ends with a period.

Page 86: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

He pulled the plastic tarp off the chairs and folded it and

carried it out to the garage and put it in

his car.

Page 87: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Polysyndeton: The repetition of

conjunctions in close succession for

rhetorical effect.

Page 88: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

It is not that today’s artists cannot paint, it is that today’s

critics cannot see..

Page 89: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Balanced Sentence: Characterized by

parallel structure, two or more parts of the sentence have the same form, emphasizing

similarities or differences.

Page 90: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.

Page 91: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Antithesis: The juxtaposition of

contrasting ideas in balanced phrases.

Page 92: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

It was about eleven o'clock in the morning, mid October, with the sun not shining and a

look of hard wet rain in the clearness of the

foothills. I was wearing my powder-blue suit, with dark blue shirt,

tie and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool socks with dark blue clocks on them. I was

neat, clean, shaved and sober, and I didn't care

who knew it.

Page 93: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Running Style: A type of sentence that

appears to follow the inner working of the mind by mimicking the rambling, associative syntax of thought.

Page 94: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

I came, I saw, I conquered.

Page 95: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Asyndeton: The omission of

conjunctions between words, phrases, or

clauses.

Page 96: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Romeo loves Juliet and Juliet, Romeo.

Page 97: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Elliptical Construction: A

sentence containing a deliberate omission of

words.

Page 98: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

At the risk of being redundant and repetitive and

redundant, let me say that hearing the same thing over and over

and over again is the last thing children

need from their parents.

Page 99: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Tautology: The repetition, within the immediate context, of

the same word or phrase or the same

meaning in different words; usually as a

fault of style.

Page 100: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Another possible adjustment relates to the

age at which Social Security and Medicare

benefits will be provided. Under current law, and even with the so-called

normal retirement age for Social Security slated to move up to 67 over the next two decades, the ratio of the number of years that the typical worker will spend in

retirement to the number of years he or she works will rise in the long

term.

Page 101: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Circumlocution: To write evasively; to

discuss a topic without saying

anything concrete about it.

Page 102: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Do you want me to hit you?

Page 103: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Rhetorical Question: A question asked merely for effect with no answer expected.

Page 104: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

I speak Spanish to God, Italian to women,

French to men, and German to my horse.

Page 105: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Isocolon/Parallel Structure: A

succession of phrases of approximately equal

length and corresponding structure.

Page 106: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Ready are you? What know you of ready? For eight hundred years have I trained Jedi.

Page 107: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anastrophe: Inversion of the normal

syntactical structure of a sentence.

Page 108: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true

place for a just man is also a prison.

Page 109: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Periodic Sentence: A type of sentence in

which the main idea is expressed at the end.

Page 110: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The cat sat on the mat, purring softly

and licking his paws.

Page 111: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Loose Sentence: The most common sentence

in modern usage, begins with the main point (an independent clause), followed by

one or more subordinate clauses.

Page 112: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

SOUNDS

Page 113: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Whose woods these are I think I know.

His house is in the village though.

Page 114: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

End Rhyme: Rhyme of the terminal syllables of lines of poetry.

Page 115: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness

Page 116: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Euphony: A pleasing arrangement of sounds.

Page 117: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Bam! Boom! Crash!

Page 118: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Onomatopoeia: The formation or use of

words that imitate the sounds associated with the objects or actions to which they refer.

Page 119: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I

pondered weak and weary.

Page 120: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Internal Rhyme: Rhyme that occurs within a

line of verse

Page 121: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

I must confess that in my quest I felt depressed and

restless.

Page 122: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Assonance: Repetition of vowels without

repetition of consonants used as an alternative to rhyme

in verse.

Page 123: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

First and last, odds and ends, short and

sweet

Page 124: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Consonance: Recurrence or repetition of

consonants especially at the end of stressed syllables without the similar correspondence

of vowels

Page 125: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

The claws that catch and kick and crash against the crammed

cabin.

Page 126: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Cacophony: Harsh or discordant sounds within a literary

work.

Page 127: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

POETRY - TYPES OF METER

Page 128: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

U /a DORE

Page 129: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

iambic

Page 130: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

/ UNEV er

Page 131: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

trochaic

Page 132: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

U U /ob vi OUS

Page 133: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

anapestic

Page 134: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

/ U UWHIS per ing

Page 135: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

dactylic

Page 136: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

POETRY - MEASURES OF METER

Page 137: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Thus I

Page 138: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

monometer

Page 139: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Move over, Ham

Page 140: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

dimeter

Page 141: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

In this contracted star

Page 142: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

trimeter

Page 143: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

If on my theme I rightly think

Page 144: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

tetrameter

Page 145: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

My name is Ozmandias, King of Kings

Page 146: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

pentameter

Page 147: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

While the world sought light by night and

sought not thy light

Page 148: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

hexameter

Page 149: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Yes, makin' mock o' uniforms that guard you while you sleep

Page 150: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

heptameter

Page 151: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I

pondered, weak and weary,

Page 152: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

octameter

Page 153: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

POETRY - NAME THAT METRICAL LINE

Page 154: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Tell me not in mournful numbers

Page 155: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Trochaic tetrameter

Page 156: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Take to the wounded the needed and much longed for medicine

Page 157: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Dactylic pentameter

Page 158: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

When I consider how my life is spent

Page 159: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Iambic pentameter

Page 160: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

On the shores of the sea where the eagles

fly near rocky shoals.

Page 161: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anapestic pentameter

Page 162: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Ah, distinctly I remember, it was in the bleak December

Page 163: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Trochaic octameter

Page 164: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

And today the great Yertle, that marvelous

he

Page 165: AP LITERATURE FINAL PREP. RHETORICAL TERMINOLOGY

Anapestic tetrameter