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By: Dani Ashmun Period 5

By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

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Page 1: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

By: Dani AshmunPeriod 5

Page 2: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

Define:•When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual motif or truth about society or life.Examples:•Animal Farm and how the animals and events all represent a member or event in the Russian revolution•Avatar and how the forest of Pandora resembles the slow destruction of the Amazon by humans.•The Lord of the Flies and how society will break down to savagery without civilization and laws.

Page 3: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 4: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 5: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 6: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

Define:•The repetition of letters at the beginning of many words in a row, usually consonant sounds.Example:•The great giant governed the gods of goodwill.•Sally like super soups from the store.•Arnold and Abby gave apples to Amy for her bunny named Angel.

Page 7: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 8: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

Define:•An intended or unintended reference to a work of literature, mythology, song, historical event, or movie.Example:•“The final game was John’s waterloo.” Waterloo is a reference to the final battle where Napoleon was finally defeated.•“The girl’s love of sweets was her Achilles heel.” This is an allusion the warrior of Greek mythology whose only weakness was his heel.•“The killer wore the mark of Cain as he stalked his brother.” This refers to the Bible story of Cain and Able.

Page 9: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 10: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 11: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

Define:•When a word has more than one meaning and may imply something other than the obvious.Example:•“Prostitutes Appeal to Pope.” The word appeal can have multiple meanings that have completely different connotations.•“We saw her duck.” Duck can mean an actual animal or to get out of the way of something.•“I’ll promise I’ll give you a ring tomorrow.” Ring could mean a ring on the phone ring, as in an engagement ring.

Page 12: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 13: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 14: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

Define:•A comparison between two things that makes writing more descriptive and can connect well-known things or ideas to unfamiliar things or ideas.Example:•“I am as graceful as a refrigerator falling down stairs.” •“MTV is to music as KFC is to chicken.” •The universe is like a safe to which there is a combination. But the combination is locked up in the safe."

Page 15: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 16: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual
Page 17: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

"Allegory - Definition and Examples of Allegories." Grammar and Composition - Homepage of About Grammar and Composition. Web. 30 Sept. 2011. <http://grammar.about.com/od/terms/g/allegory.htm>.

"Ambiguity - Definition and Examples of Ambiguity and Ambiguous in English." Grammar and Composition - Homepage of About Grammar and Composition. Web. 30 Sept. 2011. <http://grammar.about.com/od/terms/g/ambiguity.htm>.

"Analogy (rhetoric) - Definition and Examples of Analogy - Figures of Speech." Grammar and Composition - Homepage of About Grammar and Composition. Web. 30 Sept. 2011. <http://grammar.about.com/od/ab/g/analogy.htm>.

"What Are Some Examples of an Allusion." The Q&A Wiki. Web. 30 Sept. 2011. <http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_some_examples_of_an_allusion>.

Page 18: By: Dani Ashmun Period 5. Define: When an author uses a character or plot to represent something else besides the literal. Usually it represents an conceptual

 "What Is an Example of Ambiguity." The Q&A Wiki. Web. 30 Sept. 2011. <http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_an_example_of_ambiguity>.

"What Is the Allegory of "Lord of the Flies"? - Lord of the Flies Discussion." ENotes - Literature Study Guides, Lesson Plans, and More. Web. 30 Sept. 2011. <http://www.enotes.com/lord-of-the-flies/discuss/what-allegory-lord-flies-4237>.