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Literary Terms & Academic Words

Name ___________________________________
Horizontales
a set of rules in a language. It dictates how words from different parts of speech are put together in order to convey a complete thought.
a comparison of two seemingly different things by stating one is the other
To justify (with facts or evidence) why you believe something is reasonable or appropriate.
Your position or side on a topic or issue
The attitude of the author; the author's style, structure of writing, word choice that set the mood.
a hint or warning of what is to come
a group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem; a verse.
To explain in greater detail to add depth and clarification
life experiences, ideas, or emotions experienced everywhere
when the opposite of what you had reasonable belief would happen actually occurs
descriptive language that a reader or listener can picture in their minds; activates our imagination & appeals to our senses: sight, smell, hear, taste, touch
a statement of the main point someone wants to discuss or prove within a paper
a comparison of two seemingly different things using like or as
a word that sounds like what it refers to or describes; the word mimics the natural sound. example: boom, purr, shhh, ouch
repetition of the beginning sounds of 2+ words near each other
an extreme exaggeration not meant to be taken literally
a word or phrase that is not formal or literary, typically one used in ordinary or familiar conversation
something—like an object, word, sound, idea, or person—that represents a deeper idea
Verticales
universal truth; a message the author wants to convey on a deep level
the repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of sentences, clauses, or poetic lines
a statement that appears at first to be contradictory, but upon reflection then makes sense.
when the audience knows something critical in the story that the character(s) do not know
to study something closely and carefully in order to understand or explain it explain it.
the surrounding details or situation that explains why something happens; surrounding words that help to explain meaning.
putting two things together to show the difference;comparing and contrasting to create an interesting effect
Sentences or phrases are grammatically the same; repetition, or similarities, within phrases or sentences
main purpose of a text; a brief, overall summary of what the entire story is about; what the text is mostly about
giving human traits or qualities to nonhuman objects
To combine evidence with your background knowledge to reach a conclusion about something
the use of vowel sounds at the start or within words close to each other on
The feeling the author wants the reader to get from the story
To interrupt the chronological order of the story to take a reader back in time to the past events in a character's life
a comparison of two otherwise unlike things based on what they both resemble or how they're similar. examples - dog : cat, school : teacher, ice cream : summer
to have the same sound or syllables at the end of words