AP Midterm Terms Flashcards

1
Q

alliteration

A

the repetition of a similar consonant sound in words in sentence; usually the sound at the beginning of the sentence

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2
Q

allusion

A

an expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly; an indirect or passing reference

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3
Q

amorous

A

showing, feeling, or relating to sexual desire

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4
Q

anaphora

A

A rhetorical device where a word, or group of words, is repeated in consecutive clauses

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5
Q

apostrophe

A

a writer or a speaker detaches himself from the reality and addresses an imaginary character in his speech; ex; the dagger speech

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6
Q

argumentative

A

a tone that argues a point, like persuasive but more combattive

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7
Q

assonance

A

the close repetition of middle vowel sounds between different consonant sounds; ex. fAde/pAle; pEt/wEst

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8
Q

atmosphere

A

the setting, people in the setting, everything that sets the scene for the story to be told in

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9
Q

bathos

A

When a writer who is intending to be pathetic, exceeds a limit and descends into the ridiculous. An exaggerated form of PATHOS

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10
Q

caricature

A

a ludicrous or grotesque version of ones self, almost like a visual parody of that person

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11
Q

carnal

A

relating to physical, especially sexual, needs and desires

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12
Q

colloquial

A

language used in familiar and casual conversation as opposed to more elaborate words most frequently found in literature

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13
Q

concrete diction/abstract diction

A

the concrete way it is written vs the writing that speaks on things other than the five senses

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14
Q

couplet

A

a pair of lines in meter, used to separate the stanza of poetry, they each have an end that implies only a grammatical pause, but not the end of the sentence

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15
Q

coy

A

playfully shy

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16
Q

craven

A

lacking in courage, cowardly

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17
Q

denotation/connotation

A

the concrete definition of a word
vs
the loose, more casual or more often associated definition of that word

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18
Q

dialogue

A

words spoken between two characters

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19
Q

diction

A

style of speaking or writing as dependent upon choice of words

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20
Q

digressive

A

something that wanders away from the main topic, distracts from the development of the main point and the plot
ex; Updike’s excessive writing

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21
Q

dramatic monologue

A

a type of poetry where a single character is overheard, revealing a dramatic situation

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22
Q

elegy

A

a poem of serious reflection, usually for the lamenting of the dead

23
Q

euphemism

A

a mild or indirect word often substituting another, in order to make something look less harsh

24
Q

evocation

A

the action of bringing forth something through writing, like an idea or a memory

25
Q

extended metaphor

A

a metaphor sustained over several lines or that becomes the controlling image of the entire poem or passage

26
Q

hyperbole

A

Overstatement, deliberate over exaggeration for effect; “Let’s eat, I’m starving”

27
Q

iconoclast

A

a person who attacks cherished beliefs and institutions; a skeptic

28
Q

imminence

A

the state of being imminent or impending

29
Q

impotent

A

not powerful, unable to attain or sustain an erection

30
Q

incorrigible

A

unable to be corrected, improved or reformed

31
Q

interrogative sentence

A

a sentence thats a question

32
Q

juxtaposition

A

a literary technique in which two or more ideas, places, characters and their actions are placed side by side in a narrative or a poem for the purpose of developing comparisons and contrasts

33
Q

litotes

A

is a more specific form of ironical understatement that affirms something by stating its opposite;“She’s no fool.” “He’s not hard to look at.”

34
Q

magnanimity

A

generosity

35
Q

metonymy

A

A figure of speech where one word is substituted for another, often times because of the association the word has.
ex; “The pen is mightier than the sword”

36
Q

modes of discourse

A

the four basic types of writing; narration, description, exposition, and argumentation.

37
Q

parallelism

A

the use of successive verbal constructions in poetry or prose that correspond in grammatical structure, sound, meter, meaning, etc.

38
Q

logos

A

an appeal to logic

39
Q

pathos

A

an appeal to emotion

40
Q

ethos

A

an appeal to ethics (moral principles)

41
Q

quaint

A

nice and pleasureful, also reference to the C word in older rhetoric, so used a lot when describing a woman

42
Q

reiteration

A

a repetition or rephrasing of a point or phrase

43
Q

ruminate

A

to think deeply about something

44
Q

speculative

A

based on conjecture rather than knowledge

45
Q

strife

A

angry or bitter disagreement over fundamental issues

46
Q

subordinate clause

A

a clause, typically introduced by a conjunction, that forms part of and is dependent on a main clause

47
Q

synecdoche

A

A figure of speech in which a part of something stands for a whole thing; “I’ve got wheels. Want a ride?”

48
Q

synesthesia

A

a technique used to present ideas, characters or places in such a manner that they appeal to more than one senses like hearing, seeing, smell, etc; A person seeing alphabets and also smelling them; one sense triggers another; “back to the region where the sun is silent…”

49
Q

syntax

A

the arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed sentences in a language

50
Q

didactic

A

excessively instructive in writing

51
Q

discursive

A

digressing from subject to subject

52
Q

oratory

A

exaggerated, eloquent, or highly colored language

53
Q

oxymoron

A

a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction (e.g., faith unfaithful kept him falsely true ).

54
Q

paradox

A

a statement or proposition that, despite sound (or apparently sound) reasoning from acceptable premises, leads to a conclusion that seems senseless, logically unacceptable, or self-contradictory.