12 AP Lang Terms (Exemplification-Understatement)
satire (example)
Stephen Colbert
synecdoche (example)
"Ask for her hand in marriage"
sarcasm (example)
"Did you come up with that all by yourself?"
hyperbole (example)
"My backpack weighs tons!"
understatement (example)
"My mom's a little irritated I crashed the car-I'm grounded for the next 24 months."
exemplification (example)
"The Town Beautification Funds are being sorely misused; the streets are full of litter, the parks are full of broken equipment, and City Hall's facade is drab and crumbling."
idiom (example)
"This costs an arm and a leg!" meaning "This is very expensive."
onomatopoeia (example)
"We heard an ominous hiss from the kitchen."
parallelism (example)
"We went to sea; we went to war; we went to bed."
personification (example)
The sun was shining happily today.
paradox (example)
These phrases include "dark angel," "fresh rot," "blissful hell," etc.
parody (example)
Weird AI is the master of the musical parody genre.
idiom (def)
a commonly used phrase that signifies something very different than its literal meaning
satire (def)
a genre of humorous and mocking criticism to expose the ignorance and/or ills of society
paradox (def)
a phrase or assertion that appears to contradicts itself (but the contradiction itself may have it own meaning)
understatement (def)
deliberately minimizing something, usually for humorous effect
personification (def)
giving human characters to a nonhuman object or idea
sarcasm (def)
mockingly stating the opposite of what you mean, easier to convey in the spoken word than via writing
hyperbole (def)
overstating a situation for humorous or dramatic effect
exemplification (def)
providing examples in service of a point
synecdoche (def)
referring to one part of something as a way to refer to the whole
parallelism (def)
repeated structural elements in a sentence
onomatopoeia (def)
using "sound-effect" words
parody (def)
using the form of something to mimic and make fun of it