Literature

Allegory
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Alliteration
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Allusion
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Apostrophe
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Atmosphere
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Conceit
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Conflict
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Dramatic irony
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Extended metaphor
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Figurative language
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Flashback
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Hyperbole
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Imagery
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Irony
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Metaphor
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Oxymoron
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Paradox
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Personification
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Satire
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Sarcasm
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Simile
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Situational irony
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Symbol
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Synechdoche
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Tenor
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Tone
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Vehicle
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Verbal irony
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Allusions are based primarily on...
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Three common sources of allusions are...
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
3 things about irony
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Irony is rarely used because it is frequently misunderstood
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Many examples of --------- are later seen to be ironic.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
You can tell the part of speech of a word by its ------ in the sentence.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A -------- is a verbal that always ends in -ing.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------ is a verbal that is only used as a noun.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
The ------ mood states a condition contrary to fact.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
The ------- mood states a fact.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
The --------- mood gives a command or makes a request.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ---------- follows a linking verb and renames or explains the subject
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------- completes a prepositional phrase
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------ follows an action verb and recieves
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------ ------- is a noun or an adjetive that renames or describes the direct object
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------ is a word that follows a noun and explains or identifies that noun
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A --------- noun names a group and is singualr in form
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A -------- is two or more words used as a single noun
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
If the subject is doing the action of the verb, the verb is in the -------- voice.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
If the subjet is recieving the action of the verb, the verb is in the ------- voice.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
The verb must agree with the subject in ---------
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------- takes the place of a noun
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A ------ is the word for which a pronoun stands
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A pronoun must agree with its antecendent in ------- and ---------
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Pronouns used as ------- and ------- should be in the nominative case.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Pronouns used as -------, -------, and ------ -- ----- should be in the objective case.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
A pronoun apposotive must be in the same case as -----------
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
Use the ------- case pronoun before a gerund.
Predicate nominative
Type of extended metaphor that forms a story with two levels of meaning (literal and implied)
Function
Artful deviation from its literal speech
Descriptive words or phrases that appeal to sense perspective in order to create an impression
Foreshadowing
Object of preposition
Giving human characteristics to non human things
Person, place, thing, or idea within a narrative or poem that means something in addition to itself
Obvious overstament used to make a point
Imperative
Comparison consisting of the stated or implied equivalence of two dissimilar things
A referance within a work to something else, usually history or another artistic work
Person created by author to create a story
Type of irony where reader knows the plot but the characters dont
Number
Type of comparison that draws a striking parrallel between 2 dissimilar things
Shared knowledge
Direct object
Collective
Sustained verbal irony that generates two layers of meaning, literal and implied
Passie
Antecedent
Predicate nominative and subject
What is expected to happen and what actually happens
Nominative
Appositive
Underscores the paradoxical, works off implied meanings, violates reader's expectations
Bible, literary works, and history
False
Mock praise
Brief phrases that combine contradictory elements for effect
A speaker or writer directly addressing an absent person, abstraction, or inanimate object
Subjunctive
Indicative
Metaphor developed beyond a single sentence or comparison
Indirect objects, direct objects, and object of prepisition
Corrective ridicule of some object of scorn usually usually outside of the literature itself
Objective complement
The repition of initial consonant sounds
Active
Comparison of two unlike objects using like or as
Compund
Number and tense
Events that happend before action of story or action before the narrator was speaking
A mood or emotion that the reader is suppose to share with the characters
Pronoun
Using a part of something to stand for the whole
Irony within diologue
In a metaphor, the origional subject which the metaphor seems to describe
The way it was used
Attitude of an author toward his or her subject
In a metaphor, the image the tenor of the metaphor is being compared too
Opposition of two or more forces or characters
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