ENGLISH VOCAB FINAL

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Regionalism

An emphasis on themes, characters, and settings from a particular geographical region

Litotes

An ironic double negative/understatement

Caesura

Any interruption or break to create a natural rhythm in the poem

Allusion

Brief, indirect reference to a person, place, thing, or idea of historical, cultural, political, or literary significance. - "don't act like Romeo in front of her"

Euphemism

Child-proofing inappropriate words

Diction

Choice and use of words/phrases

Metaphor

Comparison whiteout using like or as

Ambivalent

Conflicted

Agreement

- everyone and everybody = singular, So use- he/she

Elements of naturalism

1) attempt to analyze human behavior objectively 2) belief that human behavior is determined by environment 3) sense that human beings cannot control own destinies 4) sense of life as a losing battle

Elements of Puritanism

1) children who disobey are destined to be satans child and cursed 2) cannot express anger or intense emotions towards another 3) strict religious codes

Situational Irony

1) event or action that is opposite to what we would expect

Elements of Romanticism

1) interest in common man and childhood 2) strong senses, emotions, and feelings 3) awe of nature 4) celebration of the individual 5) importance of imagination

Prose (What is it? Why/when is it used? What does it look like when given an example of it?)

1) looks like a paragraph 2) could represent loss of control or lower class 3) is plainer/cleaner speaking

Elements of realism

1) rejection of heros 2) detailed depictions of ordinary characters 3) emphasis on lower classes 4) avoid exotic, sensational, or dramatic 5) focus on ethnic struggles 6) use of everyday speech

Verbal Irony

1) saying one thing but meaning another 2) speaker must understand the irony behind the statement 3) isn't always spoken

Dramatic Irony

1) the audience knows something about the future or present the character doesn't 2) about knowing

Blank verse (What is it? Who is it used for? Give an example of a character?)

1) unrhymed iambic pentameter 2) for upper class 3) with emotionally charged thoughts (lady Mac.)

Denotation

Dictionary meaning of a word

End rhyme

End of a poem where the two lines rhyme

Logical appeals use...

Facts, examples, and careful arguments

Dynamic Character

A character who grows, learns, or changes as a result of the story's action

Flat Character

A character who one who only has one or two traits and who does not develop in the course of a story

Static Character

A character whose personality doesn't change throughout the events in the story's plot

Stanza

A division or unit of a poem

Tall tale

A folk story associated with the American frontier regions; elements include humorous situations, or characters with extra ordinary abilities

Round Character

A fully developed character who demonstrates some complexity and who develops or changes in the course of a work

Theme

A main idea or underlying message of the literary work

Alliteration

A number of words have the same first constant sound and occur close together in a series. - "a big bully beats a baby boy"

Antithesis

A parallel paradox that is the perfect opposite

Parallel Structure

A repitition of the same pattern of words or phrases within a sentence/passage to show that two or more ideas have the same level of importance

Allegory

A story with the purpose of teaching moral or principal - "the bass, the river, and Sheila mant"

Archetype

A typical character, an action, or a situation that presents universal patterns of human nature. - "good versus evil"

Meter

A unit of rhythm in poetry; the pattern of the beats

Dialect

A variation of a language spoken by a particular group; may differ in vocabulary, pronunciations, or grammar

Connation

A word that may give off a different meaning based on assumptions of the word

Tone

An attitude of a writer toward a subject or an audience. Conveyed through a choice of words or viewpoint of a writer on a subject

Emotional appeals use...

Language and details that play on our feelings

Free verse

No rhyme scheme w/o a regular pattern or rhyme

Hyperbole

Obvious exaggeration

Vernacular

Ordinary, everyday speech of a particular country or region; informal speech

Anaphora

Repeated words for context

Consonance

Repitition of the same consonant two or more times in short succession "pitter patter"

Assonance

Repitition of vowel sounds example: (lives of quiet)

Chiasmus

Reversal of words (he went to the country, to the town went she)

Verbal irony

Saying something but meaning the opposite like sarcasm

Garrulous

Talking a great deal, especially about unimportant things

Idiom

The expression should not be taken literally - "you drive me up a wall!"

Local color

The portrayal of behaviors distinctive to a region, such as speech, behavior, dress, food, beliefs

Passive

The subject of the sentence is being acted upon by the verb of the sentence - "the boy was bitten by the dog"

Active

The subject of the sentence performs the action expressed in the verb - "the dog bit the boy"

Oxymoron

Two opposite ideas joined together to create an effect - "cruel kindness" - "living death"

Rhyming Couplet

Two successive rhyming lines in a verse that has the same meter to form a complete thought

Juxtaposition

Two things being seen close together but with contrasting effect -" it was the best of times, it was the worst of times"

Ethical appeals use...

Values such as religious values or moral beliefs

Inverted syntax

When lines do not follow traditional sentence patterns; subject and verb are reversed

Dramatic irony

When the audience knows something which the character does not

Situational irony

When the outcome of a situation is different than the audience expects

Syntax

Word order and sentence structure

Internal rhyme

Words within a line that rhyme

disillusionment

a feeling of disappointment resulting from the discovery that something is not as good as one believed it to be.

Innocence

the quality or state of being innocent; freedom from sin or moral wrong.

Satire

the use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices.


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