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Academic Vocabulary

Academic Vocabulary. English. allegory. Characters in a story represent a different meaning. alliteration. Repetition of sounds to create a mood. allusion. Figure of speech which references another piece of literature, art, history. anaphora.

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Academic Vocabulary

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  1. Academic Vocabulary English

  2. allegory • Characters in a story represent a different meaning

  3. alliteration • Repetition of sounds to create a mood

  4. allusion • Figure of speech which references another piece of literature, art, history

  5. anaphora • Repetition of word or words at beginning of sentence

  6. antagonist • Character who opposes or is in opposition to the main character(protagonist)

  7. asyndeton • Omission of conjuctions

  8. climax • Turning point in the story • Things change here!

  9. conflict • Disagreement between 2 or more characters/forces in a story

  10. Direct characterization • Author tells us directly about a character

  11. drama • Literature meant to be performed by actors on a stage with dialogue

  12. Dramatic irony • Audience knows something the actors do not

  13. Dynamic character • Character who changes throughout the story

  14. epic • Story involving a long journey, supernatural hero, mythical creatures

  15. Extended metaphor • Author uses a comparison throughout a piece

  16. fiction • Writing from the author’s imagination

  17. First person point of view • “I” tell the story

  18. Flat character • Character with only 1 trait; not really developed throughout work

  19. genre • Type of literature e.g. short story, poem, drama,

  20. hyperbole • Figure of speech which exaggerates statements

  21. idiom • Group of words which take on a totally different meaning in context

  22. Indirect characterization • Author shows us about a character

  23. Man vs. man • Conflict where one man has a problem with another man

  24. Man vs. society • Conflict where a man has a conflict with the accepted ways of doing things

  25. metaphor • Comparison of unlike items not using “like” or “as”

  26. monologue • An extended uninterrupted speech by a character in a drama

  27. mood • How you feel while reading a story

  28. nonfiction • Writing which tells about real people and events without changing facts

  29. paradox • Character with seemingly contradictory qualities

  30. parallelism • Similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases, or clauses

  31. parody • Style of a work is imitated for comic relief or ridicule • E.g.-Saturday Night Live

  32. personification • Giving inanimate objects human qualities

  33. plot • Sequence of events in a story

  34. Point of view • Angle from which story is told

  35. polysyndeton • Numerous conjunctions used in between words and phrases

  36. protagonist • Main character of a piece of literature

  37. pun • play on words

  38. Resolution/denouement • End of the story where the problems are solved

  39. Rhetorical question • Question which does not expect/demand an answer

  40. satire • Author pokes fun of a group in hopes to bring about change

  41. setting • Time, place, and situation of a story

  42. simile • Comparison of unlike items using “like” and “as”

  43. Situational irony • Contrast between what happens and what is expected to happen

  44. soliloquy • Dramatic speech where one character talks to himself and reveals his thoughts

  45. sonnet • 14 line poem, 3 quatrains and 1 rhyming couplet

  46. Static character • Character does not change throughout story

  47. syntax • The way words are grouped together

  48. theme • Central idea of a piece of writing, message of truth about life, must be one sentence

  49. Third person limited • Narrator relates thoughts and feelings of only one character in story

  50. Third person omniscient • Narrator reveals thoughts and feelings of all characters

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