The process of marking lines of poetry to show the type of feet and the number of feet they contain
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
when a reader is aware of something that a character isn't
Damning with faint praise
(fallacy) attacking a person by formally praising him/her, but for an achievement that should not be praised
Synecdoche
Connotation
an idea or feeling that a word invokes in addition to its literal or primary meaning.
Having the same word patterns pop up in one sentence
Poetry that does not conform to a regular meter or rhyme scheme
the use of one kind of sensory experience to describe another
A word inside a line rhymes with another word on the same line
Situational Irony
An outcome that turns out to be very different from what was expected
Consonance
Repetition of consonant sounds
Denouement
the final part of a play, movie, or narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are explained or resolved.
A four line stanza
Exact Rhyme
Uses words with identical end sound
Anaphora
Repeating word patterns in front, across sentences.
Polysyndeton
Using the same conjunction lots of times
Balanced Sentences
Apostrophe
A figure of speech that directly addresses an absent or imaginary person or a personified abstraction, such as liberty or love.
Antithesis
the direct opposite, a sharp contrast
Epistrophe
Repeating word patterns in the back, across sentences.
Caesurae
Caesuras (or caesurae) are those slight pauses one makes as one reads verse.
Extended Metaphor
A metaphor developed at great length, occurring frequently in or throughout a work.
Octave
8 line stanza
Euphemism
a temporary departure from the main subject in speech or writing
Mood
Feeling or atmosphere that a writer creates for the readers
Frozen!
Frozen!
Anticlimax
a disappointing end to an exciting or impressive series of events
Shakespeare Sonnet
The sonnet form composed of three quatrains and a final couplet written in iambic pentameter with the rhyme scheme abab cdcd efef gg
Pedantry
Connotation
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
Tercet
three line stanza
Diction
A writer's or speaker's choice of words
It is defined as a rhyme in which the stressed syllables of the ending consonants match, but the vowels do not.
Spenserian
A sonnet form composed of three quatrains and a couplet in iambic pentameter with the rhyme scheme abab bcbc cdcd ee.
Situational Irony
An outcome that turns out to be very different from what was expected
Anaphora
Repeating word patterns in front, across sentences.
Parallel Structure
Having the same word patterns pop up in one sentence
Denouement
the final part of a play, movie, or narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are explained or resolved.
Synaesthesia
the use of one kind of sensory experience to describe another
Syncope
Placement of two things closely together to emphasize comparisons or contrasts
A metaphor developed at great length, occurring frequently in or throughout a work.
Damning with faint praise
End Rhyme
A word at the end of one line rhymes with a word at the end of another line
Shakespeare Sonnet
The sonnet form composed of three quatrains and a final couplet written in iambic pentameter with the rhyme scheme abab cdcd efef gg
Metonymy
A figure of speech in which something is referred to by using the name of something that is associated with it
Feeling or atmosphere that writer creates for the characters
Digression
a temporary departure from the main subject in speech or writing
Tone
Attitude a writer takes toward the audience, a subject, or a character
An indirect, less offensive way of saying something that is considered unpleasant
Motif
(n.) a principal idea, feature, theme, or element; a repeated or dominant figure in a design
Frozen!
Frozen!
Octave
8 line stanza
Apostrophe
Chaismus
A statement consisting of two parallel parts in which the second part is structurally reversed
Oxymoron
A figure of speech that combines opposite or contradictory terms in a brief phrase.
Parallelism
similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases, or clauses
Syllepsis
a construction in which one word is used in two different senses ("After he threw the ball, he threw a fit.")
Epistrophe
Repeating word patterns in the back, across sentences.
Dramatic Irony
Duel!