1. | the feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage | A. | Third person point of view | |
2. | the sequence of events in a story | B. | Foreshadowing | |
3. | writer’s attitude toward his/her audience and subject | C. | Alliteration | |
4. | a category or type | D. | Internal Conflict | |
5. | the main idea of a piece of literature | E. | Rhyme Scheme | |
6. | the turning point of a story, the high point | F. | Protagonist | |
7. | a comparison between two things using like or as | G. | Symbol | |
8. | a unified group of lines in a poem | H. | Fiction | |
9. | anything that stands for or represents something else | I. | Denouement | |
10. | the author’s choice of words that delivers tone. | J. | Motivation | |
11. | a made up story | K. | Theme | |
12. | language used to create pictures for the reader (a description that appeals to any of the five senses) | L. | Setting | |
13. | time and place of a story | M. | Figurative Language | |
14. | a reference to a well known person, event, or literary work | N. | Flashback | |
15. | the problem between the protagonist and the antagonist | O. | Stanza | |
16. | a conversation between characters | P. | Series of Complications | |
17. | a comparison between two things not using like or as | Q. | Diction | |
18. | the uncertainty or anxiety the reader feels about what will happen | R. | Personification | |
19. | a story of a person’s life written by someone else | S. | Metaphor | |
20. | when the author interrupts the story to go back to an event that already happened | T. | Antagonist | |
21. | the character or force against the protagonist | U. | Biography | |
22. | the final part of a story | V. | Characterization | |
23. | what makes a character do what he/she does | W. | Figurative meaning | |
24. | the events which form the outcome of the climax of a play or story | X. | Conflict | |
25. | the main character | Y. | Suspense | |
26. | repetition of initial consonant sounds | Z. | Imagery | |
27. | words that imitate sounds | A1. | Simile | |
28. | the rhyming pattern in a poem | B1. | Onomatopoeia | |
29. | a story of a person’s life written by himself | C1. | Climax | |
30. | hints or clues about what will happen next in the story | D1. | Tone | |
31. | exactly what is said | E1. | Genre | |
32. | giving human-like qualities and/or abilities to something that is not human | F1. | Resolution | |
33. | how the author gets us to know a character | G1. | Autobiography | |
34. | man vs. man, man vs. nature, man vs. technology, man vs. society, or any combination | H1. | Dialogue | |
35. | man vs. himself | I1. | External Conflict | |
36. | symbolic meaning | J1. | Allusion | |
37. | using similes, metaphors and personification | K1. | Plot | |
38. | problems that move the story along | L1. | Literal meaning | |
39. | the narrator tells about someone else’s life and is all knowing | M1. | First person point of view | |
40. | the narrator uses first person pronouns to tell about her/his own life and feelings | N1. | Third person omniscient | |
41. | the narrator uses third person pronouns to tell about someone else’s life and feelings | O1. | Mood |
O1 | 1. | the feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage | A. | Third person point of view |
K1 | 2. | the sequence of events in a story | B. | Foreshadowing |
D1 | 3. | writer’s attitude toward his/her audience and subject | C. | Alliteration |
E1 | 4. | a category or type | D. | Internal Conflict |
K | 5. | the main idea of a piece of literature | E. | Rhyme Scheme |
C1 | 6. | the turning point of a story, the high point | F. | Protagonist |
A1 | 7. | a comparison between two things using like or as | G. | Symbol |
O | 8. | a unified group of lines in a poem | H. | Fiction |
G | 9. | anything that stands for or represents something else | I. | Denouement |
Q | 10. | the author’s choice of words that delivers tone. | J. | Motivation |
H | 11. | a made up story | K. | Theme |
Z | 12. | language used to create pictures for the reader (a description that appeals to any of the five senses) | L. | Setting |
L | 13. | time and place of a story | M. | Figurative Language |
J1 | 14. | a reference to a well known person, event, or literary work | N. | Flashback |
X | 15. | the problem between the protagonist and the antagonist | O. | Stanza |
H1 | 16. | a conversation between characters | P. | Series of Complications |
S | 17. | a comparison between two things not using like or as | Q. | Diction |
Y | 18. | the uncertainty or anxiety the reader feels about what will happen | R. | Personification |
U | 19. | a story of a person’s life written by someone else | S. | Metaphor |
N | 20. | when the author interrupts the story to go back to an event that already happened | T. | Antagonist |
T | 21. | the character or force against the protagonist | U. | Biography |
I | 22. | the final part of a story | V. | Characterization |
J | 23. | what makes a character do what he/she does | W. | Figurative meaning |
F1 | 24. | the events which form the outcome of the climax of a play or story | X. | Conflict |
F | 25. | the main character | Y. | Suspense |
C | 26. | repetition of initial consonant sounds | Z. | Imagery |
B1 | 27. | words that imitate sounds | A1. | Simile |
E | 28. | the rhyming pattern in a poem | B1. | Onomatopoeia |
G1 | 29. | a story of a person’s life written by himself | C1. | Climax |
B | 30. | hints or clues about what will happen next in the story | D1. | Tone |
L1 | 31. | exactly what is said | E1. | Genre |
R | 32. | giving human-like qualities and/or abilities to something that is not human | F1. | Resolution |
V | 33. | how the author gets us to know a character | G1. | Autobiography |
I1 | 34. | man vs. man, man vs. nature, man vs. technology, man vs. society, or any combination | H1. | Dialogue |
D | 35. | man vs. himself | I1. | External Conflict |
W | 36. | symbolic meaning | J1. | Allusion |
M | 37. | using similes, metaphors and personification | K1. | Plot |
P | 38. | problems that move the story along | L1. | Literal meaning |
N1 | 39. | the narrator tells about someone else’s life and is all knowing | M1. | First person point of view |
M1 | 40. | the narrator uses first person pronouns to tell about her/his own life and feelings | N1. | Third person omniscient |
A | 41. | the narrator uses third person pronouns to tell about someone else’s life and feelings | O1. | Mood |