AP Lang Terms Dumbed Down

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apostrophe

addresses absent/imaginary person or personified abstraction (like love)

figure of speech

any device that makes figurative language; many compare unlike things

allegory

character/story element symbolically represent something more abstract than the literal meaning; usually moral truth or generalization about human existence

analogy

comparison between two different things

irony/ironic

contrast between what is stated and what is really meant, between what appears to be and what is true 1. verbal - words literally state opposite of true meaning 2. situational - events turn out opposite of expectations 3. dramatic - readers know something characters don't

atmosphere

emotional mood created by the entire work; partly by setting, objects, weather, etc; can foreshadow

hyperbole

exaggeration or overstatement

conceit

fancy expression; usually extended metaphor or surprising analogy between unlike things; shows cleverness

euphemism

less offensive substitutes for unpleasant words/concepts; can add humor or irony; "passed away" instead of "died"

denotation

literal dictionary meaning

loose sentence

main idea (independent clause) comes first

extended metaphor

metaphor developed at great length; occurs frequently throughout work

ambiguity

multiple meanings

connotation

nonliteral implied meaning; involves ideas, emotions, attitudes

asyndeton

not including conjunctions between coordinate phrases, clauses, or words; "I came. I saw. I conquered."

juxtaposition

putting two different things side-by-side to compare/contrast; reveal something by seeing its opposite

allusion

reference to something in history, literature, religion, or myths

anaphora

repeating word/phrase at beginning of successive phrases, clauses, or lines

epistrophe

repeating word/phrase at the end of several clauses

alliteration

repetition of sounds, usually first consonants; for meaning or musical sound; "she sells sea shells"

imagery

sensory details to describe, arouse emotions, represent abstractions (can represent more than 1 thing); related to the 5 senses

anecdote

short story about real incident/person; helps audience connect on personal level

aphorism

statement about general truth or moral; unknown author = folk proverb; sums up the author's point; "actions speak louder than words"

litotes

understatement; affirm something by stating the negative of its opposite; "she's not unattractive"

colloquial/colloquialism

use of slang; not okay for formal stuff; gives conversational/familiar tone; includes dialects

antecedent

what the pronoun refers to

diction

writer's word choices; formal vs informal, ornate vs plain

figurative language

writing/speech that doesn't carry literal meaning; imaginative and vivid


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