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LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW !!

LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

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Page 1: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

LITERARY TERMS-

MUST KNOW !!

Page 2: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Setting

•Time, place, location and period.

Page 3: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Imagery:

The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks, sounds, feels, smells, or tastes. Most of the time, it refers to appearance.

e.g. “Tita was so sensitive to onions, any time they were being chopped, they say she would just cry and cry; when she was still in my great-grandmother’s belly her sobs were so loud that even Nacha, the cook, who was half-deaf, could hear them easily.”--Like Water for Chocolate

Page 4: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Characterization:The means by which an author establishes character. An author may directly describe the appearance and personality of a character or show it through action or dialogue.

Page 5: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Plot:

The series of 5 events that form the story:Exposition-characters, conflict and setting are established

Rising action-series of events builds up to the conflict

climax-main point, highest point of interest/emotion

falling action-events and complications begin to resolve

resolution-conclusion ends with a happy or tragic ending

Page 6: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Conflict:

The struggle in the story. Traditionally, there are four main conflicts:man vs. self (internal)man vs. person (external)man vs. society (external)man vs. nature (external)(man Vs. supernatural)(man vs. technology)

Page 7: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

IRONY

Page 8: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

FORESHADOWING

Page 9: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

MOOD

Page 10: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

CHARACTER

Page 11: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Simile:

Comparing two unlike things using “like” or “as.”

e.g. “I’m as hungry as a pig,” or “Your eyes are like stars that brighten my night.”

Page 12: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Metaphor:

A comparison of two unlike things using any form of the verb “to be”–-i.e. am, are, is, was, were.

Ex: “This chair is a rock,” or “I am an island.”

Page 13: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Personification:

Giving inanimate objects human characteristics.

e.g. “The wind howled through the night.”

Page 14: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Theme:

The central idea of a

work

Page 15: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

POV- First Person

Page 16: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

POV- Third Person

Page 17: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Flashback

Page 18: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Repetition

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SPEAKER

Page 20: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Symbolism:

The use of one thing to represent another. Something that stands for something else.

e.g. A dove is a symbol of peace.

Page 21: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Satire:

A work that makes fun of something or someone.

e.g. Saturday Night LiveThe SimpsonsSouth Park

Page 22: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Sonnet:

A fourteen-line poem. Different kinds of sonnets have different rhyme schemes. The most notable are Shakespeare’s Sonnets.

Page 23: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Diction

1)Word choice.

2) The author’s choice of words. An author has the option of choosing any word from our language, why does he/she choose to use certain words and not others? In order to create a certain tone.

Page 24: LITERARY TERMS- MUST KNOW - pehs.psd202.orgpehs.psd202.org/documents/mleibfor/1512612338.pdf · Imagery: The use of description that helps the reader imagine how something looks,

Open-ended

question