Literary
Terms AP English
Act – a major division in the
action of the play, comprising one or more *scenes. A break between acts often
coincides
with a point at which the plot jumps ahead in time.
*Antagonist – the most prominent of the characters who
oppose the *protagonist or hero(ine) in a dramatic or
narrative
work. The antagonist is often a villain
seeking to frustrate a heroine or hero; but in those works
in which
the protagonist is represented as evil, the antagonist will often be a virtuous
or sympathetic
character,
as Macduff is in Macbeth.
Aside – a short speech or remark spoken by a character in a
drama, directed either to the audience or to another
character,
which by *convention is supposed to be inaudible to the other characters on
stage. See also soliloquy.
*Catastrophe – the final resolution or *denouement of the
plot in a *tragedy, usually involving the death of the
*protagonist.
*Catharsis – the effect of purgation or purification achieved by
tragic drama, according to Aristotle’s argument in his
Poetics
(4th century BC). Aristotle wrote that a *tragedy should succeed “in
arousing pity and fear in such a way
as to
accomplish a catharsis of such emotions”. There has been much dispute about his
meaning, but Aristotle
seems to
be rejecting Plato’s hostile view of poetry as an unhealthy emotional
stimulant. His metaphor of
emotional
cleansing has been read as a solution to the puzzle of audiences’ pleasure or
relief in witnessing the
disturbing
events enacted in tragedies. Another
interpretation is that it is the *protagonist’s guilt that is purged,
rather
than the audience’s feeling of terror. Adjective: cathartic.
*Character – (1) any of the persons involved in a story (sense
1). (2) The distinguishing moral
qualities and
personal
traits of a character (sense 2).
Ø Flat character – a character (1) whose
character (2) is summed up in one or two traits.
Ø Round character – a character (1) whose
character (2) is complex and many-sided.
Ø Stock character – A stereotyped character:
one whose nature is familiar to us from prototypes in previous
fiction.
Ø Dynamic character – a character that is changed
by the actions in which he or she is involved.
Ø Static character – a character that remains unchanged
or little changed throughout the course of the story.
*Climax – the turning point or
*Comic Relief – the interruption of a serious work,
especially a *tragedy, by a short humorous episode that relieves
emotional
tension.
*Conflict – A clash of actions, desires, ideas, or goals in the
plot of a story. Conflict may exist
between the main
character
and some other person or persons (man vs. man), between the main character and
some external
force –
physical nature, society, or “fate” (man vs. nature), or between the main
character and some destructive
element
in his own nature (man vs. himself).
*Crisis – a decisive point in the plot of a play or story,
upon which the outcome of the remaining action depends,
and which
ultimately precipitates the *catastrophe or *denouement.
*Denouement – the portion of a plot that reveals the final
outcome of its conflicts or the solution of its mysteries.
*Deus ex machina – (“god from the machine”).
The resolution of a plot by use of a highly improbable chance,
coincidence
or artificial device that solves some difficult problem or crisis.
*Epilogue – a concluding section of any written work during
which the characters’ subsequent fates are briefly
outlined.
*Exposition – the setting forth of a systematic explanation
of or argument about any subject; or the opening
part of a
play or story, in which we are introduced to the characters and their
situation, often by reference
to
preceding events. Adjective: expository.
Verb: expound.
*Falling Action – The segment of the plot that comes between
the climax and the conclusion.
*Foil – a character
whose qualities or actions serve to emphasize those of the *protagonist (or of
some other
character)
by providing a strong contrast with them.
*Hamartia – the Greek word for error or failure, used by
Aristotle in his Poetics (4th century BC) to designate
the false
step that leads the *protagonist in a *tragedy to his or her downfall. The term should not be
confused
with ‘tragic flaw’ which is a defect in character. Hamartia is the action that the character
takes.
*Hero or Heroine – the main character in a
narrative or dramatic work. The term
protagonist is preferable since
the
leading character may not be morally or otherwise superior. When our expectations of heroic qualities
are
strikingly disappointed, the central character may be known as an anti-hero
or anti-heroine.
*Hubris – the Greek word for ‘insolence’ or ‘affront’, applied
to the arrogance or pride of the *protagonist in a
*tragedy
in which he or she defies moral laws or the prohibitions of the gods. The protagonist’s transgression
or
*hamartia leads eventually to his or her downfall, which may be understood as
divine retribution. In
proverbial
terms, hubris is thus the pride that comes before a fall. Adjective: hubristic.
Monologue – an extended speech uttered by one speaker, either to
others or as if alone. See also
soliloquy.
Ø Naïve narrator - is uncomprehending
(child, simple-minded adult) who narrates the story without realizing its true
implications.
Ø Intrusive narrator – keeps
interrupting the narrative to address the reader
*Prologue – an introductory section of a literary work or an
introductory speech in a play.
*Protagonist – The central character in a story.
*Rising Action – The part of a plot that leads through a
series of events of increasing interest and power to the
climax or
turning point. The rising action begins
with an inciting moment, an action or event that sets a
conflict
of opposing forces into motion, and moves through complication(s), an entangling
of the affairs of
the
characters in a conflict, toward the climax, the major crisis that brings about
a change in the fortunes of
the
protagonist.
Scene – a subdivision of an act or of a play not divided
into acts. A scene normally represents
actions happening
in one
place at one time, and is marked off from the next scene by a curtain, a
black-out, or a brief emptying
of the
stage.
Soliloquy – a dramatic speech uttered by one character speaking
aloud while alone on stage, or while under the
impression
of being alone. The soliloquist
thus reveals his or her inner thoughts and feelings to the audience,
either in
supposed self-communion or in a consciously direct address.
*Tragedy – a type of drama in which the protagonist, a person
of unusual moral or intellectual stature or outstanding
abilities,
suffers a fall in fortune due to some error of judgment or flaw in his or her
nature.
*Tragic Flaw – the defect of character that brings about the
protagonist’s downfall in a *tragedy.
Turning Point – the point in the plot where the protagonist’s
situation changes for the better or the worse; after this the
action begins its movement
toward a final resolution.
*Villain – the principal evil character in a play or
story. The villain is usually the
antagonist opposed to the
protagonist,
but in some cases may be the protagonist himself/herself.
Aestheticism
– reverence
for beauty; movement that held beautiful form is to be valued more than
instructive
content.
Attitude
– the
author’s viewpoint regarding his subject matter. Attitude can usually be detected in author’s
tone.
Baroque
– a grand
and exuberantly ornamental style
Classicism
– an
adherence to the principals of Greek and Roman literature.
Colloquialisms – words or phrases that are used in everyday
conversation or informal writing which are usually
considered inappropriate for
a formal essay.
Connotation
– the range
of further associations that a word or phrase suggests in addition to its
straightforward
dictionary meaning.
Convention
– a device
of style or subject matter so often used that it becomes a recognized means of
expression.
For example, a conventional lover cannot
eat or sleep. An author who mocks the
convention might create an
overweight lover who sleeps a lot.
Denotation
– the
precise, literal meaning of a word, without emotional associations or
overtones.
Determinism
– philosophy
that suggests people’s actions and all other events are determined by forces
over
which human beings have no control.
Dialect
– the
version of a language spoken by people of a particular region or social group.
Dialogue
– The
conversation of two or more people as represented in writing.
Diatribe
– violently
bitter verbal attack.
Diction
– the choice of words used in a literary work.
Epigraph
– the use
of a quotation at the beginning of a work that hints at its theme.
Expressionism
– presents
life not as it appears on the surface, but as it is passionately felt to be by
an author or
character.
Flashback
– a way of
presenting scenes or incidents that took place before the opening scene.
Hedonism
– the pursuit
of pleasure above all else.
Inference – a conclusion the reader can draw based upon details presented by the author.
Invective
– direct
denunciation or name-calling.
Irony
– in its
broadest sense, the incongruity, or difference, between reality (what is) and
appearance (what seems
to be).
Ø Dramatic irony – a situation in which the
audience knows more about a character’s situation than the
character does, forseeing an outcome contrary to the
character’s expectations.
Ø Situational irony – the contrast between what is
intended or expected and what actually occurs.
Ø Verbal irony – a contrast between what is
said and what is actually meant.
Jargon
– the
special language of a profession or group.
Juxtaposition
– the “side
by side” comparison of two or more objects or ideals for the purpose of
highlighting
similarities or differences.
Local
Color – the
use of the physical setting, dialect, customs and attitudes that typify a
particular region.
Narrative
Pace – the
speed at which an author tells a story; the movement from one point or section
to another.
Naturalism
– style of
writing that rejects idealized portrayals of life and attempts complete accuracy,
disinterested
objectivity, and frankness in depicting
life as a brutal struggle for survival.
Mood
– the
prevailing emotional attitude in a literary work, for example, regret,
hopefulness, bitterness, etc.
Pantheism
– The
identification of God with the universe.
Regionalism
– the
tendency in literature to focus on a specific geographical region or locality,
re-creating as
accurately as possible its unique setting,
speech, customs, manners, beliefs and history.
Sarcasm
– harsh,
cutting, personal remarks to or about someone, not necessarily ironic.
Satire
– any form
of literature that blends ironic humor and wit with criticism directed at a
particular folly, vice
or stupidity. Satire seeks to correct, improve, or reform
through ridicule.
Stream-of-consciousness
– a
technique that allows the reader to see the continuous, chaotic flow of
half-formed
and discontinuous thoughts, memories,
sense impressions, random associations, images, feelings and re-
flections that constitute a character’s
consciousness.
Tone
– the
reflection in a work of the author’s attitude toward his or her subject. Tone in writing is comparable
to tone of voice in speech, and may be
described as brusque, friendly, imperious, insinuating, teasing, etc.
Unity
– the
quality of oneness in a literary work, in which all parts are related by some
principle or organization
so that they form an organic
whole, complete and independent in itself.
Voice
– the sense
a written work conveys to a reader of the writer’s attitude, personality and
character.
Wit
– ingenuity
in connecting amusingly incongruous ideas; intellect, humor.
*Anticlimax
– an effect that spoils a climax. Adjective:
Anticlimactic.
*Confidant/confidante
– someone
that the protagonist talks to, enabling the audience or reader to become aware
of the protagonist’s motivation.
Dystopia
– an
undesirable imaginary society. Orwell’s 1984
or Huxley’s Brave New World.
Explication
de texte – the
detailed analysis, or close reading of a passage of verse or prose. Such explication
seeks to make meaning clear through a
painstaking examination and explanation of style, language,
symbolism, and the relationship of parts
to the whole.
*Motivation
– the
psychological and moral impulses and external circumstances that cause a character
to act,
think, or feel a certain way.
*Narrative
voice – the
attitude, personality or character of the narrator as it is revealed through
dialogue or
descriptive and narrative commentary.
*Point
of View – the
vantage point, or stance, from which a story is told; the eye and mind through
which the
action is perceived and filtered,
sometimes called narrative perspective.
Ø
First person – the story is told by one of its characters, using the first person
pronoun “I” which does
not give the reader insight
into other characters’ motives or thoughts.
Ø
Third person objective – the author limits him/herself to reporting what the
characters say or do; he or
she does not interpret their behavior or tell us
their private thoughts or feelings.
Ø Third person omniscient – the author knows all
(godlike) and is free to tell us anything, including what the characters are
thinking or feeling and why they act as they do.
Ø Third person limited – the author limits
him/herself to a complete knowledge of one character in the
story and tells us only what that one character
feels, thinks, sees or hears.
*Subplot
– a
secondary series of events that are subordinate to the main story; a story
within a story.
Suspense
– quality
that makes the reader or audience uncertain or tense about the outcome of
events.
Suspension
of Disbelief – the demand made of an audience to provide some details with their
imagination and
to accept the limitations of reality and
staging; also the acceptance of the incidents of a plot by a reader.
Symbol
– anything
that stands for or represents something else beyond it, usually an idea
conventionally associated
with it.
*Theme
– an
abstract idea that emerges from a literary work’s treatment of its
subject-matter, or a topic recurring in
a
number of literary works.. Themes
include love, war, revenge, betrayal, fate, etc.
Utopia
– a
desirable imaginary society.
Allusion
– an
indirect or passing reference to an event, person, place or artistic work that
the author assumes the
reader will understand.
Anachronism
– an event,
object, custom, person or thing that is out of its natural order of time. A clock strikes
in Julius Caesar.
Apostrophe
– a
rhetorical device in which the speaker addresses a dead or absent person, or an
inanimate object
or abstraction.
Epigram
– any
terse, witty, pointed saying. For
example, “She knows the cost of everything, but the value of
nothing”.
Euphemism
– the
substitution of a mild term for one more offensive or hurtful.
Hyperbole
– exaggeration
for the sake of emphasis in a figure of speech not meant literally. “I’ve been waiting
here for ages.”
Kenning
– a
metaphoric compound word or phrase used as a synonym for a common noun. “Ring-bestower” for
king; “whale-road” for sea; “candle of heaven” for
the sun; “war-brand” for a sword.
Litotes
– a figure
of speech by which an affirmation is made indirectly by saying its opposite,
usually with an
effect of understatement. “I’d not be averse to a drink.”
Malapropism
– the comic
substitution of one word for another similar in sound, but quite different in
meaning. “I
would have her instructed in geometry (geography)
that she might know of contagious (contiguous) countries.”
Metaphor
– the most important
and widespread figure of speech in which one thing, idea, or action is referred
to
by a word or expression normally denoting
another thing, idea or action, so as to suggest some common
quality (qualities) shared by the
two. “He is a pig.”
Extended metaphor – an idea
sustained throughout the work
Dead metaphor – one that has been
used so much it has lost its figurative meaning and is taken literally (eye
sword.
Onomatopoeia
– the use
of words that seem to imitate the sounds they refer to (whack, fizz, crackle,
etc.).
Personification
– the
technique by which animals, abstract ideas, or inanimate objects are referred
to as if they
were human. “The wind howled through the
trees.”
Proverb
– a short
saying that expresses some commonplace truth or bit of folk wisdom. “A stitch in time saves
nine.”
Pun
– a form of
wit, not necessarily funny, involving a play on a word with two or more
meanings.
Simile
– a less
direct metaphor, using like or as. “He
is like a pig.”
Synecdoche
– figure of
speech that utilizes a part as representative of the whole. (e.g. ‘hands’ for
manual laborers; ‘the law’ for a police officer).
Tautology
– repetition
of an idea in a different word, phrase or sentence. “With malice toward none, with
charity for all.” Abraham Lincoln.
Understatement
– a type of
verbal irony in which something is purposely represented as being far less
important
than it actually is.
Allegory
– a story
or visual image with a second distinct meaning partially hidden behind its
literal or visible
meaning.
An allegory may be conceived at a metaphor that is extended into a
structured system.
Anecdote
– a brief
narrative of an entertaining and presumably true incident.
Comedy – a literary work written chiefly to amuse its
audience. It usually provides a happy
ending and emphasizes
human limitations
rather than human greatness.
High
Comedy – characterized by grace, elegance and wit; intellectual comedy
Low
Comedy – crude, boisterous comedy; slapstick and crude jokes; physical comedy
Confessional Literature – autobiographical writing in
which the author discusses highly personal and private
experiences
normally withheld.
Courtly
Love – the emotion
that a knight was expected to feel toward a noble lady. A convention of literature
of the Middle Ages.
Dirge
– a funeral
song of lamentation; a short lyric of mourning.
Discourse
– spoken or
written language.
Ø Argument – discourse intended to
convince or persuade through appeals to reason or emotion.
Ø Description – the picturing in words of
people, places and activities through detailed observations
of color, sound, smell, touch and motion.
Ø Exposition – the setting forth of a
systematic explanation of or argument about any subject.
Ø Narration – the process of relation a
sequence of events or another term for narrative.
Ø Rhetoric – the art of persuasion, in
speaking or writing
Essay
– a short
written composition in prose that discusses a subject or proposes an argument
without
Claiming to be a complete or thorough
exposition. Essays can be formal,
informal or humorous.
Epistolary
– a novel
written in the form of correspondence between characters.
Exemplum
– brief
tale told to illustrate a biblical text or to teach a lesson or moral.
Expose
– article
exposing scandal or crime.
Fable
– a brief
tale that conveys a moral lesson, usually by giving human speech and manners to
animals
and inanimate things.
Farce – A type of drama related to comedy but emphasizing
improbable situations, violent conflicts, physical
action,
and coarse wit over characterization or articulated plot.
Genre
– a French
term for a type, species, or class of composition such as novel, poem, short
story, and such
sub-categories as sonnet, science fiction
or mystery.
Gothic
– a type of
novel characterized by mystery, horror, and the supernatural, often with
haunted castles,
secret passageways, grisly visions, and
all of the paraphernalia of the tale of terror.
Historical
Novel – attempts
to re-create an historically significant personage or series of events.
Homily
– religious
sermon or discourse
Melodrama
– drama
that pits unbelievably good characters against a despicably evil
character. The plot includes
dire events and near disasters. Good is always rewarded, and evil
punished.
Memoir
– an
account of a single period in a writer’s life, often one that coincides with
important historical events.
Miracle
Play – medieval
religious drama based on a miraculous event in a saint’s life or a story from
the Bible.
Mock
Epic – comically
or satirically imitates the form and style of the epic, treating a trivial
subject in a lofty
manner.
Morality
Play – allegory
in dramatic form. Hero, who represents
all mankind, is surrounded by personifications
of virtues, vices, angels, demons and
death, who battle for possession of the hero’s soul.
Novel
– a lengthy
fictional narrative in prose dealing with characters, incidents, and settings
that imitate those
found in real life.
Novelette
– built on
one incident; shorter than a novel, but has more development of character and
theme than a
short story.
Novella
– a short
novel.
Paean
– a song of
triumph or thanksgiving.
Parable
– a brief
tale intended to be understood as an allegory illustrating some lesson or
moral.
Pedantic
– writing
that borders on lecturing. Scholarly,
academic, and often overly difficult and distant.
Prose
– in the
broadest sense, all forms of ordinary writing and speech lacking the sustained
and regular rhythmic
Psychological
Novel – novel
that focuses on the “interior” lives of its characters, their mental states and
emotions,
and their psychological motivations of
their actions than on the actions themselves.
Romance
– any
extended work of fiction that deals with adventure, extravagant characters,
strange or exotic
places, mysterious or supernatural
incidents, heroic or marvelous achievements, or passionate love.
Science
Fiction – novels
and short stories set either in the future or on some imaginary world.
Sociological
Novel – concerned
primarily with social issues and problems.
Tract
– a formal,
religious essay or pamphlet.
Alliteration
– the
repetition of the same sounds, usually initial consonants, in neighboring
words.
Assonance
– the
repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds in neighboring words.
Blank
verse – poetry
written in unrhymed iambic pentameter, which must not be confused with free
verse.
clipped, explosive delivery,
or words that contain a number of plosive consonants.
Cadence
– the
rising and falling rhythm of speech, especially that of the balanced phrases in
free verse or in
prose.
Also the fall or rise in pitch at the end of a phrase or sentence.
Caesura – a pause in a line of
verse, often coinciding with a break between clauses or sentences.
Conceit
– an unusually
far-fetched or elaborate metaphor presenting a surprisingly apt parallel
between two
apparently dissimilar things or feelings.
Connotation – see pg. 1.
Consonance
– the
repetition of identical or similar consonants in neighboring words whose vowel
sounds are
different (e.g. coming home, hot foot).
Couplet
– two
consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme and that are written to the same meter,
or pattern of
stressed and unstressed syllables.
Three
be the things I shall have till I die:
Laughter
and hope and a sock in the eye.
-Dorothy
Parker
Dactyl
– metrical
foot of three syllables, one accented followed by two unaccented.
Dirge – a funeral song of
lamentation; a short lyric of mourning.
Dissonance
– harshness
of sound and/or rhyme, either inadvertent or deliberate.
Dramatic
monologue – a
kind of poem in which a single fictional or historical character other than the
poet speaks
to a silent audience of one or more
persons. Such poems reveal not the poet’s
own thoughts, but the mind of
the impersonated character.
Elegy
– an
elaborately formal lyric poem lamenting the death of a friend or public figure,
or serious reflection on
a serious subject.
End-stopped
line – a
line brought to a pause at which the end of a verse line coincides with the
completion of a
sentence, clause, or other independent
unit of syntax. It is the opposite of
enjambment.
Enjambment
– the
running over of the sense and grammatical structure from one verse line or couplet
to the next
without a punctuated pause.
Epic
– a long
narrative poem celebrating the great deeds of one or more legendary heroes in a
grand style.
Euphony
– a
pleasing smoothness of sound, perceived by the ease with which the words can be
spoken in
combination. Adjective: euphonious.
Foot
– the basic
unit of rhythmic measurement in a line of poetry.
Free
Verse – poetry
that is free of rhyme and meter resembling natural speech.
Heroic
Couplet – two
end-stopped iambic pentameter lines rhymed aa, bb, cc, with the thought usually
completed
in the two line unit.
Hexameter
– a line
containing six feet.
Iamb
– a metrical
foot consisting of two syllables, an unaccented syllable followed by an
accented as in the word
invade.
Image
– language
referring to something that can be perceived through one or more of the senses.
Imagery
– the
making of pictures in words.
In
medias res – Latin
for “the middle of things.” The term
describes the narrative practice of beginning a
story in the middle of the action to
involve the reader, and then using one or more flashbacks to fill in
what led up to that point.
Lyric
– a usually
short, personal poem expressing the poet’s emotions and thoughts rather than
telling a story.
Measure
– an older
word for meter. The term is also used to
refer to any metrical unit such as a foot.
Meter
– the
pattern of measured sound-units recurring more or less regularly in lines of
verse.
Octave
– a group
of eight verse lines forming the first part of a sonnet; or a stanza of eight
lines.
Ode
– an
elaborately formal lyric poem, often in the form of a lengthy address to a
person or abstract entity, always
serious and elevated in tone.
Pastoral
– a poem
dealing with shepherds and rural life.
Pentameter
– a line of
five feet. Iambic pentameter, normally
10 syllables, has had special status as the standard
line in many poetry forms.
Persona
– the
assumed identity or fictional “I” assumed by a writer in a literary work.
Prosody
– the study
of sound and rhythm in poetry.
Quatrain
– a verse
stanza of four lines, rhymed or unrhymed.
Refrain
– a line,
group of lines, or part of a line repeated at regular or irregular intervals in
a poem.
Rhyme
– the
similarity of sound between two words.
Ø End rhyme – rhyme which comes at the
end of a line of poetry.
Ø Internal rhyme – rhyme which comes within
the line.
Ø Feminine rhyme – two-syllable rhyme.
Ø Forced rhyme – meaning in the poem
suffers because of the stilted nature of the rhyme
Ø Masculine rhyme – one-syllable rhyme.
Ø Exact rhyme – identical rhyme between
two words (feature/creature)
Ø Slant rhyme (proximate,
near) –
inexact rhyme between two words
Ø Eye rhyme – rhyme based on spelling
rather than sound (bough/though)
Rhythm
– the
patterned flow of sound in poetry and prose.
Sound devices create rhythm.
Ø Sprung rhythm – measured by counting only
the accented syllables and by varying the number of unaccented syllables
Scansion
– analyzing
the meter in lines of poetry by counting and marking the accented and
unaccented syllables,
and dividing the lines into metrical feet.
Sestet
– a
six-line poem or stanza.
Sonnet
– a
fourteen-line lyric poem in iambic pentameter.
Ø English sonnet – rhyme scheme of abab,
cdcd, efef, gg (a/k/a Shakespearean sonnet)
Ø Italian sonnet – rhyme scheme of abba,
abba, cde, cde (a/k/a Petrarchan sonnet)
Stanza
– a section
or division of a poem, resembling paragraphs in prose.
Stress – the emphasis placed on a word or syllable.
Trochee – a metrical foot consisting of two syllables, an
accented syllable followed by an unaccented syllable, as in
the
word fortune.
Verse
– poetry as
distinct from prose. The term is usually
more neutral than poetry, indicating that the technical
requirements of rhythm and metre are present, while poetic merit may or
may not be present.
Villanelle – a lyric poem made up of five stanzas of three lines,
plus a final stanza of four lines.
Volta – the Italian term for the turn in the argument or
mood of a sonnet, occurring between the octave and the
sestet
in the 9th line.
Anaphora
– the
regular repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive
phrases or clauses.
We
shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds.
We
shall fight in the fields and in the streets…….
Antecedent
– the word,
phrase, or clause to which a pronoun refers.
Antithesis – a figure of speech in which opposing or contrasting
ideas are balanced against each other using
grammatically parallel syntax.
There
is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors,
And
no slave who has not had a king among his.
Helen Keller
Asyndenton
– conjunctions
are omitted, producting a fast-paced and rapid prose.
I
came. I saw. I conquered.
Chiasmus
– grammatical
structure in which the first clause or phrase is reversed in the second,
sometimes
Repeating the same words.
“And
so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can
do
for you: ask what you can do for your country.”
John
F. Kennedy
Clause
– a group
of words containing a subject and verb that may or may not be a complete sentence.
Gerund
– a noun
formed from a verb. (Living)
Inversion
– reversing
the normal order of sentence parts for poetic effect.
Loose
sentences –
modifiers follow the SVC pattern allowing the strength of the sentence to come
first.
A
car hit him just as he bent over to tie his shoelace.
Paradox
– a
statement or expression so surprisingly self-contradictory as to provoke us
into seeking another
sense in which it would be true.
Success
is counted sweetest
By
those who ne’er succeed.
-Emily
Dickenson
Parallelism
– expressing
similar or related ideas in similar grammatical structure.
He
tried to make the law clear, precise and equitable.
Periodic
sentences – the
main idea comes last in the sentence, leaving the reader with a more powerful
last
Impression.
Just
as he bent over to tie his shoelace, a car hit him.
Polysyndenton
– the opposite
of asyndenton. The use of many conjunctions has a slowing effect.
Rhetorical
question – questions
that do not require an answer.
Ad
Hominem – “against
the man;” attacking the arguer rather than the argument or issue.
Ad
Populum – “to
the crowd;” the misconception that because a great number of people do
something, it is
therefore correct. The parents of Sylvia’s friends allow their
daughters to stay out until 2:00 am, therefore
Sylvia’s parents should let Sylvia stay
out until 2:00 am as well.
Appeal
to Authority – Person A is (or claims to be) an authority on subject S. Person A makes claim C about
subject S.
Therefore, C is true.
Appeal
to Belief – Most
people believe that X is true, therefore X is true.
Appeal
to Emotion – when
the arguer manipulates emotions in order to get people to accept a claim as
being
true.
Ø Appeal to Popularity: “The new UltraSkinny diet will make you feel
great. No longer be troubled by your
weight. Enjoy the admiring stares of the
opposite sex. Revel in your new freedom
from fat.
Ø Appeal to Fear: You must believe that God exists. After all, if you don’t accept the existence
of God, you’ll face the horrors of hell.
Ø Appeal to Flattery: Might I
say that this is the best class I’ve ever taken. By the way, about those two points I need to
get an A. ..
Ø Appeal to Novelty: Our
company has to be on the cutting edge.
That means new ideas and new techniques have to be used. The GK method is new, so it will do better
than the old method.
Ø Appeal to Pity: I’m positive
that my work will meet your requirements.
I really need the job since my grandmother is very sick.
Ø Appeal to Ridicule: Support
the ERA? Sure, when the women start
paying for the drinks!
Ø Appeal to Spite: You can’t
be serious about nominating John for president.
Remember what he pulled last year?
Ø Appeal to Tradition: I
believe in God. People have believed in
God for generations, so God must exist.
Bandwagon
– Threat of
rejection from one’s peers replaces evidence in an argument. “I realize prejudice is wrong,
but we don’t allow African Americans or Women in our
group. You understand.
Begging
the Question – taking for granted something that needs proving. ‘Free all political prisoners.”
Biased
Sample – drawing
a conclusion about a population based on a sample that is biased or
prejudiced. In
determining the population’s stance on gun control,
polling only NRA members would be a biased sample.
Circular
Reasoning – trying
to prove one idea with another idea that is too similar to the first. “A writer is a person
who writes.
Confusing
Cause & Effect – A and B regularly occur together.
Therefore A is the cause of B.
Hasty
Generalization – drawing a general and premature conclusion on the basis of only one or
two cases. “All
dogs
should be muzzled because a golden retriever disturbed the peace in the park.
Middle
Ground – Position
A and B are too extreme. C rests in
between A and B. Therefore C is the
correct one.
Motivational
Appeal – an
attempt to reach an audience by recognizing their needs and values and how
these
contribute to their decision making.
Non
Sequitur – “It
does not follow;” an inference or conclusion that does not follow established
evidence or
premises.
“He’s the most popular; therefore he should be president.”
Poisoning
the Well – Unfavorable
information about person A is presented (true or false). Therefore, any claims
made by person A will be false.
Post
Hoc – “After
this, therefore because of this;” assuming that an incident that precedes
another is the cause of
the second. “Andy worked on his science paper longer than
his English paper, therefore he felt he should earn
an A.
Propaganda
– writing
or images that seek to persuade through emotional appeal rather than through
logical proof;
written or visual texts that describe or
depict using highly connotative words or images without justification.
Reductio
ad Absurdum – “to
reduce to the absurd.” It reduces an
argument to an either/or choice. “The possession
of firearms should be completely banned or
completely legal.
Slippery
Slope – predicting
without justification that one step in a process will lead unavoidably to a
second,
generally undesirable step.
Straw
Man – disputing
a view similar to, but not the same as, that of the arguer’s opponent
Two
Wrongs Make a Right – Bill has borrowed Jane’s pen, but found he didn’t return it. He tells himself that it is
okay to keep it, since she would have done
the same.
Antithesis
– “Against the
thesis”; the statement of the opposing viewpoint
Argument
– a single
assertion or a series of assertions presented and defended by the writer.
Concession
– an
admission in an argument that the opposing side has points; to grant, allow or
yield to a point.
Credibility
– the
audience’s belief in the arguer’s trustworthiness.
Deduction
– the
process of moving from a general rule to a specific example.
Details
– facts
that support the thesis or assertion in a piece of writing.
Ethos
– appeal to
the credentials of the person speaking; character, goodwill, trustworthiness,
intelligence, etc.
Induction
– the
process of moving from a given series of specifics to a generalization.
Logic
– the
process of reasoning.
Logos
– appeal to
logic.
Pathos
– appeal to
emotion.
Persuasion
– type of
argument that has as its goal an action on the part of the audience.
Rhetoric
– the
entire process of effective written communication.
Rhetorical
shift – a
change or movement in a piece from one point, idea, concept, etc. to another;
signaled by words
such as but, then, however, etc.
Thesis
– the main
idea of a piece of writing.
Cause
and Effect – reasoning
that proposes one event or condition can bring about another.
Classification
– identifies
the subject as part of a larger group with shared features.
Compare/Contrast
– showing a
subject more clearly by pointing out ways that it is similar, or unlike,
something
else.
of the group.
Description
– a mode of
writing that conveys the evidence of the senses; sight, hearing, touch, taste,
smell.
Division
– breaking
the subject into smaller segments.
Narration
– the
classification of discourse that tells a story or relates an event.
to do something.
Analyze
Concrete Details – look for nouns that are tangible as opposed to abstract details
that describe concepts.
Analyze
Descriptive Details – look for the writer’s sensory description.
Analyze
Devices –
look for the figures of speech, syntax, diction, and other stylistic elements
that collectively
produce a particular artistic effect.
Analyze
the Author’s Language – concentrate on how the elements of language combine to form a whole –
how
diction, syntax, figurative language and sentence
structure create a cumulative effect.
Analyze
the Author’s Narrative Technique/Devices – look at the author’s ordering of events,
building of
suspense, climax, withholding of information,
revelation of information, and pacing.
that intensify the emotional
effect. Analyze how these words
complement the writer’s argument as it builds
logically.
Analyze
Resources of Language – look for diction, syntax, sentence structure and figures of
speech. The
cumulative effect of a work is produced by
the resources of language a writer chooses.
Analyze
Rhetorical Features – the tooks of rhetoric; tone, diction, imagery, etc.
Analyze
Rhetorical Structure – look at how the passage is constructed; organization, images, details
or argument.
Analyze
Sentence Structure – look at basic sentence structure; simple, compound, and complex. Consider
variation or lack of it, any unusual
devices such as repetition or inverted word order, and any unusual word
or phrase placement. Look at the effect of the structure. For example, a series of short, terse
sentences can
produce a feeling of speed and choppiness,
which may suit the author’s purpose.
Analyze
Stylistic Devices – look at diction, syntax, tone, attitude, figures of speech,
connotations and repetition.