Section 1

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Synecdoche

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Last updated

6 years ago

Date created

Mar 1, 2020

Cards (39)

Section 1

(39 cards)

Synecdoche

Front

Using part of something to stand for the whole.

Back

Apostrophe

Front

A speaker or writers directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object

Back

Cacophony

Front

The use of words that are harsh or distant in sound

Back

Sound and syntax

Front

Word order

Back

Imagery

Front

Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspectives in order to create an impression.

Back

Conceit

Front

A type of comparison that draws a striking parallel between two dissimilar things.

Back

Allegory

Front

The nightingale and the glowworm uses to natural creatures to symbolize types of poetry it is therefore a short __________

Back

Imaginative comparison

Front

Frequently drawn using various types of figurative language

Back

Theme

Front

A recurring or emerging idea in a work of literature

Back

Implied metaphor

Front

A metaphor that is conveyed indirectly

Back

A man to a window

Front

George Herbert's conceit in the windows primarily compares

Back

Genesis 2:23

Front

First poem ever created by man

Back

Coremark a great literature is a theme

Front

That reoccurs often and gradually reveals a key idea of the author

Back

Fable

Front

A brief fanciful story that embodies a particular moral

Back

Paradox

Front

A statement that seems to be self-contradictory yet actually makes sense when understood in the right context.

Back

Simile

Front

A comparison of two unlike objects using like or as.

Back

Parallelism

Front

Similarity in the structure of two or more phrases, clauses, or sentences.

Back

Plot

Front

A series of events arranged to produce a definite sense of movement toward a specific goal

Back

comparison

Front

Eliect vivid emotion

Back

Behaves vigorously

Front

Return of the Rangers often includes a main character known as a hero because he always__________

Back

Theme, imaginative comparison, and sound & syntax

Front

The three marks of literature

Back

Tenor

Front

In a metaphor, the original subject which the metaphor seeks to describe.

Back

Figurative Language

Front

An artful deviation from literal speech.

Back

Euphony

Front

The use of words whose sounds are pleasant and musical to the ear.

Back

Metonymy

Front

An expression in which a related thing stands for the thing itself

Back

Metaphor

Front

An imaginative comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things.

Back

Dialect

Front

Dialogue written to reflect qualities of a characters speech

Back

Theme

Front

Core mark of great literature and governs all other aspects

Back

Hero

Front

Rogers is the ________ in the Return of the Rangers

Back

Hero

Front

A male or female protagonist who behaves virtuously within a story

Back

To slow down the stories pace

Front

Kenneth Roberts uses parallelism in right turn of the Rangers for which purpose

Back

Vehicle

Front

The image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared to.

Back

Extended metaphor

Front

A metaphor that is developed beyond a single sentenced comparison

Back

Apostrophe

Front

Twain uses _________ when he describes the Jay talking to the hole in the house as if it were a person

Back

Worldview

Front

The philosophical veiwpoint from which a person examines the world and draws conclusions

Back

Allegory

Front

A type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning, a literal and an implied

Back

Chornolical order

Front

Th order in which events actually occur in a story

Back

Thesis

Front

The statement in which an essayists proclaims exactly what he is trying to prove.

Back

Personification

Front

Giving human characteristics to something that is not human

Back