AP Literature and Composition
Literary Terms
- Allegory: piece of literature that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning.
- Alliteration: occurence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words.
- Allusion: a reference.
- Antagonist: a character or a group of characters who stand in opposition to the main character.
- Apostrophe: arangement of words addressing a non-existent person or an abstract idea in such a way as it were present and capable of feelings.
- Archetype: typical character, action, or situation that seems to represent universal patterns of human nature.
- Aside: when a character's dialogue is spoken but not heard by any other characters.
- Assonance: two or more words close to one another that repeat the same vowel sound but start with different consonant sounds.
- Audience: readers of the text.
- Blank Verse: unrhyming verse written in iambic pentameter.
- Cacophony: harsh, discordant mixture of sounds.
- Characterization: process by which a writer reveals a character's traits and personality.
- Character: individual in a piece of literature.
- Comedy: genre of literature with a happy or cheerful ending; not necessarily humorous.
- Conflict: element involving a struggle between two opposing forces.
- Couplets: 2 lines of verse, usually in same meter and joined by rhyme.
- Consonance: repetitive sounds produced by consonants within a phrase.
- Connotation: implied meaning; association that comes along with a word.
- Denotation: the literal meaning of a word.
- Dialect: form of language particular to specific region or group.
- Dialogue: conversation between two or more characters.
- Diction-formal: heightened, impersonal word choice, dignified language of educated persons.
- Diction-informal: casual language of native speakers.
- Drama: composition presenting a story invloving a conflict or contrast of characters.
- Dynamic Character: character who undergoes important inner change.
- Enjambment: run-on sentence in poetry.
- Epic: long narrative poem.
- Epiphany: sudden realization.
- Euphony: series of words that create sound pleasing to the ears.
- Fiction: literature describing imaginary events and people.
- Flashback: interruption of chronological sequence of an event of earlier occurence.
- Foreshadowing: warning/indication of future event.
- Free Verse: type of poetry where lines are organized without a meter.
- Genre: the type of literature.
- Hubris: extreme prideor arrogance shown by a character that ultimately brings their downfall
- Hyperbole: an exaggeration.
- Iambic Pentameter: meter in English verse with 5 iambic feet per line. 5 stressed anf 5 unstressed syllables.
- Visual Imagery: words/ series of words relating to sight.
- Olfactory Imagery: words/ series of words relating to smell.
- Tactile Imagery: words/ series of words relating to touch.
- Auditory Imagery: words/ series of words relating to sound.
- Gustatory Imagery: words/ series of words relating to taste.
- Internal Rhyme: rhyme occuring within a line of poetry.
- Verbal Irony: when what is said is opposite to the literal meaning; sarcasm.
- Situational Irony: contrast between what happens and what was expected to happen.
- Dramatic Irony: contrast between what a character thinks is true and what the reader knows to be true.
- Inversion: literary technique in which the normal order of words is reversed to achieve a particular effect of emphasis or meter; example: "Shouts the policeman."
- Magical Realism: realistic narrative and naturalistic narrative are combined with surreal elements of fantasy.
- Meter: recurrent and regular rhythmic pattern in verse arragement of stressed and unstressed words.
- Motif: a recurring object, concept, or structure that helps portray a theme.
- Metaphor: statement where one thing is something else (when really, it's not).
- Novel/Novella: long narrative (normally in prose) which describes fictional characters and elements, usually in the form of a sequential story.