- Accent
-
stressed syllable, denoted with ′ (á)
- Act
-
Major division of a play.
- Allegory
-
a story where each character and action in the plot is a representation of real people during an actual event.
- Allusion
-
A reference to a famous person, character, or event.
- Anagnorisis
-
The point at which a character understands his or her situation as it really is. Meaning: recognition.
- Anapestic
-
lines made of anapests: two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed syllable: ˘ ˘ ′
- Aside
-
In drama, a line spoken by a character to the audience that the other characters on stage cannot hear.
- Assonance
-
the repetition of vowel sounds to create rhyme (boat and moat).
- Backing
-
facts that give credibility to the statement expressed in the warrant.
- Beat
-
the purposeful emphasis on a syllable or word for dramatic effect.
- blank verse
-
verse without rhyme, especially that which uses iambic pentameter.
- Catastrophe
-
The final resolution that unravels the intrigue and initiates the falling action.
- Claim
-
conclusions whose merit must be established.
- Climax
-
The moment at which the crisis reaches its point of greatest intensity and is thereafter resolved.
- Closed
-
poetry written in a specific or traditional pattern according to the required rhythm, rhyme, meter, line length, line groupings, and number of lines within a genre of poetry.
- Comedy
-
A play with a “happy” ending. It doesn’t necessarily have to be humorous.
- Comic relief
-
The final resolution that unravels the intrigue and initiates the falling action.
- Consonance
-
words that share similar consonant sounds but different vowel sounds (lark and lurk).
- Crisis
-
The turning point of uncertainty and tension resulting from earlier conflict in a plot. At this moment, it is unclear if the protagonist will succeed or fail.
- Dactylic
-
lines made of dactyls: one stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables: ′ ˘ ˘
- Decameter
-
ten meters
- Denouement
-
The outcome or result of a complex situation or sequence of events, an aftermath or resolution that usually occurs near the final stages of the plot. It is the unraveling of the main dramatic complications.
- Didactic
-
a poem intended to teach a moral lesson or impart a piece of knowledge.
- Dimeter
-
two meters
- Dramatic
-
a poem that depicts events that are either not real or not meant to be viewed as realistic; often these are part of a fictional story. The narrator of the poem is imaginary and is not the author.
- Dramatic Irony
-
A situation in a narrative in which the reader knows something about present or future circumstances that the character does not know.
- Dynamic
-
A character whose personality changes or evolves over the course of a narrative or appears to have the capacity for such change.
- End Rhyme
-
rhyming words placed at the ends of lines of poetry.
- Epigram
-
an unexpected twist or change in direction at the end of a poem.
- Epiphany
-
A sudden flare into revelation.
- Exact Rhyme
-
two words in which both the consonant sounds and vowel sounds match to create a rhyme (create and deflate).
- Exposition
-
Introduces the narrator, protagonist, and setting, and conveys relevant background information.
- Extended metaphor
-
a metaphor that is built on throughout the work.
- Falling Action
-
Events that wrap up a story after the climax.
- Feminine Rhyme
-
the rhyme of any syllable in a word BUT the last, such as the first or middle (apple and sapling).
- Figurative Language
-
when a speaker or writer departs from the usual denotation of words for emphasis or artistic quality.
- First-person point of view
-
Someone is telling the story, referring to themselves as “I.”
- Flashback
-
A method of narration in which present action is temporarily interrupted so that the reader can witness past events--usually in the form of a character's memories, dreams, narration, or even authorial commentary.
- Foil
-
A character who contrasts and parallels the main character in a play or story.
- Foot
-
one syllable of poetry.
- Foreshadowing
-
Suggesting, hinting, indicating, or showing what will occur later.
- Form
-
the "shape" or organizational mode of a particular poem.
- Fourth wall
-
The imaginary wall of the box theater setting, supposedly removed to allow the audience to see the action.
- Hamartia
-
An offense committed in ignorance of some material fact; a great mistake or accident as a result of an error by a morally good person. Meaning: error, sin.
- Heptameter
-
seven meters
- Hexameter
-
six meters
- Hubris
-
Overwhelming pride that leads to ruin. One of the tragic flaws.
- Iambic
-
lines made of iambs: an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable: ˘ ′
- iambic pentameter
-
a line of verse with five metrical feet, each consisting of one short (or unstressed) syllable followed by one long (or stressed) syllable; for example: "Two households, both alike in dignity."
- Imagery
-
he "mental pictures" that readers experience with a passage.
- Internal Rhyme
-
rhyming words placed within one line of poetry.
- Interpretation
-
a person’s own take on a work of art or literature. Writers often choose to interpret famous work through their own perspective.
- Irony
-
The opposite of what is anticipated or meant.
- Juxtaposition
-
comparing two opposite ideas side-by-side.
- Lengths of Meter
-
the number of times a pattern (meter) is repeated within one line of poetry.
- Lyric
-
a poem depicting an abstract thought, idea, emotion, or feeling; from the Greek word “lyre” (a hand-held harp on which psalmists used to compose music).
- Masculine Rhyme
-
the rhyme of monosyllabic words and the rhyme of a word’s final syllable (debauchery and archery
- Meter
-
rhythmic patterns of stresses in verse; from the Greek word "measure."
- Monologue
-
A character speaking aloud to himself, or narrating an account to an audience with no other character on stage.
- Monometer
-
one meter
- Motif
-
A conspicuous recurring element, such as a type of incident, a device, a reference, or verbal formula.
- Narrative poem
-
a poem that tells a story, complete with plot, characters, and setting.
- Narrator
-
The "voice" that speaks or tells a story.
- Nonameter
-
nine meters
- Octameter
-
eight meters
- Off Rhyme
-
two words with similar but not identical sounds (home and bone).
- Open
-
poetry written without specific rhythm (free verse), length, or rhyme scheme.
- Pentameter
-
five meters
- Peripeteia
-
A reversal of fortune or a sudden change of circumstance affecting the protagonist. Meaning: reversal.
- Persona
-
a fictitious character created by an author to be the narrator of a literary work; from the Greek word "mask."
- Personification
-
giving human-like qualities to animals or inanimate objects.
- Petrarchan (Italian) Sonnet
-
a fixed form poem of 14 lines total, divided into two stanzas – an octave (8 lines) and a sestet (6 lines). The rhyme scheme is abbaabba cdccdc, cdecde, or cdcdcd. Named after Francisco Petrarch (1304-1374).
- Poetic Justice
-
The phenomenon that occurs when morally good characters reach good, desirable circumstances or happy endings and morally bad characters reach bad, unenviable circumstances or unhappy endings.
- poetry
-
literary work in which special intensity is given to the expression of feelings and ideas by the use of distinctive style and rhythm; poems collectively or as a genre of literature.
- Point of View
-
The way a story gets told and who tells it.
- Props
-
Articles or objects that appear on stage during a play.
- prose
-
written or spoken language in its ordinary form, without metrical structure.
- Pun
-
A play on words in which one word is substituted for another similar or identical sound, but of very different meaning; what the French call "double entendre," or double meaning.
- Qualifier
-
words or phrases expressing how certain the author/speaker is concerning the claim.
- Reliable Narrator
-
Unbiased; concerned more with facts.
- Rhetorical Question
-
a question that does not elicit or expect an answer.
- Rhyme
-
correspondence of sound between words or parts of words.
- Rhyme Scheme
-
the ordered pattern of rhymes at the ends of the lines of a poem or verse.
- Rhythm
-
the varying speed, loudness, pitch, elevation, intensity, and expressiveness of speech, especially poetry.
- Rising Action
-
Action leading up to the climax.
- Scansion
-
the practice of “scanning” lines of poetry to identify and diagram their rhythmic patterns.
- Scene
-
A dramatic sequence that takes place within a single locale on stage.
- Second-person point of view
-
The narrator is talking to someone, referring to them as “you.”
- Sensory Details
-
details that engage one of the five physical senses by describing what something looks, sounds, smells, tastes, or feels like.
- Shakespearean (English) Sonnet
-
a fixed form poem of 14 lines total, divided into four stanzas - 3 quatrains (four lines) and a couplet (2 lines). The rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef gg. Named after William Shakespeare (1564-1613).
- Situational Irony
-
When accidental events occur that seem oddly appropriate, such as a pickpocket getting his own pocket picked.
- Slack
-
unstressed syllable, denoted with ˘ (ă)
- Soliloquy
-
A monologue spoken by an actor at a point in the play when the character believes himself to be alone.
- Sonnets
-
a fixed-form lyric poem of 14 lines written in iambic pentameter, usually ending with an epigram; from the Italian word "sonnetto," meaning "little song."
- Stage direction
-
A playwright's descriptive or interpretive comments that provide readers (and actors) with information about the dialogue, setting, and action of a play.
- Stanza
-
a group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem; a verse; the equivalent of a paragraph.
- Symbol
-
A word, place, character, or object that means something beyond what it is on a literal level.
- Tetrameter
-
four meters
- Third-person limited point of view
-
There is no narrator, and the story is told from the perspective of “a fly on the wall,” witnessing what the characters say and do.
- Third-person omniscient point of view
-
There is no narrator, and the story is told from a “God’s-eye” perspective, witnessing not only characters’ actions but their thoughts and feelings.
- Toulmin
-
A British philosopher, author, and educator who devoted his works to the analysis of moral reasoning.
- Toulmin’s Schema
-
A diagram containing six interrelated components used for analyzing arguments.
- Tragedy
-
A serious play in which the chief character, by some peculiarity of psychology, passes through a series of misfortunes leading to a final, devastating catastrophe.
- Tragic flaw
-
A fatal weakness or moral flaw in the protagonist that brings him/her to a tragic end.
- Tragic Hero
-
A literary character who makes a judgment error that inevitably leads to his/her own destruction.
- Trimeter
-
three meters
- Trochaic
-
lines made of trochees: a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable: ′ ˘
- Type
-
broad categories of poetry, determined by their purpose.
- Unreliable Narrator
-
Biased; voices opinions.
- Verbal Irony
-
A speaker makes a statement in which its actual meaning differs sharply from the meaning that the words ostensibly express.
- verse
-
writing arranged with a metrical rhythm, typically having a rhyme.
- Volta
-
the line break between stanzas.
- Warrant
-
the statement authorizing the movement from the data to the claim.