Top Banner
Honaker Literary Terms 1 Literary Terms Jeopardy A C E-F M-O P-S Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Final Jeopardy
53

Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

Dec 18, 2014

Download

Documents

MBrantley

 
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

Honaker Literary Terms 1

Literary Terms Jeopardy

A C E-F M-O P-S

Q $100

Q $200

Q $300

Q $400

Q $500

Q $100 Q $100Q $100 Q $100

Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200

Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300

Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400

Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500

Final Jeopardy

Page 2: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Question from A

A major character who opposes the main character in a story or play.

Example: The “bad guy” that we are against!

Page 3: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Answer from A

Antagonist

Page 4: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Question from A

The repetition of first consonants in a group of words.

Example: “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.”

Page 5: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Answer from A

Alliteration

Page 6: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Question from A

A reference to something or someone, often literary.

Example: “May the force be with you.”

Page 7: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Answer from A

Allusion

Page 8: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Question from A

The overall feeling of a work, related to tone and mood.

Example: In Science class you might be talking about layers of gases in the earth’s

_____________.

Page 9: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Answer from A

Atmosphere

Page 10: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Question from A

A story in which the characters represent abstract qualities or ideas.

Example: In westerns, the sheriff represents good, and the outlaw represents evil.

Page 11: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Answer from A

Allegory

Page 12: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Question from C

The means by which an author describes the appearance and personality of a person in a story or play.

Example: The way an author describes the main ___________ is __________.

Page 13: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Answer from C

Characterization

Page 14: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Question from C

The point at which the action in a story or play reaches its emotional peak.

Example: The most exciting part of the story.

Page 15: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Answer from C

Climax

Page 16: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Question from C

To explain how things are alike.

Example: In Algebra, you can’t _________ apples to oranges or x’s to y’s.

Page 17: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Answer from C

Compare

Page 18: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Question from C

The elements that create a plot. This can be internal or external.

Example: This can be a battle or a ________ inside a person or a __________ of man

against nature.

Page 19: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Answer from C

Conflict

Page 20: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Question from C

To explain how things are different

Example: The opposite of compare.

Page 21: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Answer from C

Contrast

Page 22: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Question from E-F

The point of view of a piece of writing in which the narrator refers to himself as “I.”

Example: Not the third but the _______.

Page 23: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Answer from E-F

First Person Point of View

Page 24: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Question from E-F

A long poem narrating the adventures of a heroic figure.

Example: The Odyssey

Page 25: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Answer from E-F

Epic

Page 26: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Question from E-F

A story that illustrates a moral, often using animals as the characters.

Example: The Tortoise and the Hare

Page 27: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Answer from E-F

Fable

Page 28: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Question from E-F

A technique in which an author gives clues about something that will happen later in the story.

Example: What usually happens after you hear the music in JAWS!

Page 29: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Answer from E-F

Foreshadowing

Page 30: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Question from E-F

Language that does not mean exactly what it says.

Example: I am so mad steam is coming out of my ears!!! If it can’t happen then it usually

is a __________ of speech.

Page 31: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Answer from E-F

Figurative Language

Page 32: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Question from M-O

The use of words that sound like what the mean.

Example: Ping, Ring, Buzz,

Page 33: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Answer from M-O

Onomatopoeia

Page 34: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Question from M-O

A comparison that does NOT use “like” or “as.”

Example: He’s a rock or I am an island.

Page 35: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Answer from M-O

Metaphor

Page 36: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Question from M-O

A long speech by one character in a play or story (that everyone is supposed to hear).

Example: Johnny Carson, Jay Leno, and David Letterman do this on the Late Shows.

Page 37: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Answer from M-O

Monologue

Page 38: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Question from M-O

A legend that embodies the beliefs of people and offers some explanation for natural and social phenomena.

Example: The Greek Gods: Zeus, Aphrodite, Athena, Hercules…

Page 39: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Answer from M-O

Myth

Page 40: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Question from M-O

A phrase made up of two seemingly opposite words.

Example: Cruel kindness or dumb smarts

Page 41: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Answer from M-O

Oxymoron

Page 42: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Question from P-S

Giving an inanimate object human characteristics.

Example: “The flames reached for the child hovering in the corner.”

Page 43: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$100 Answer from P-S

Personification

Page 44: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Question from P-S

The main character of a novel, play, or story.

Example: The “good guy” or think about another meaning of “for.”

Page 45: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$200 Answer from P-S

Protagonist

Page 46: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Question from P-S

The action of the story that summarizes the plan of the main story.

Example: The basic ideas of a story in the order that they happened.

Page 47: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$300 Answer from P-S

Plot

Page 48: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Question from P-S

A comparison that uses “like” or “as.”

Example: “I’m as hungry as a wolf.” “Her eyes are like the stars in the sky.”

Page 49: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$400 Answer from P-S

Simile

Page 50: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Question from P-S

A question not meant to be answered.

Example: “Why can’t you all just get along?”

Page 51: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

$500 Answer from P-S

Rhetorical Question

Page 52: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

Final Jeopardy

A monologue in which a character expresses his or her thoughts to the audience and does not intend the other characters to hear them.

Page 53: Power point jeopardy game reviewing literary terms

Final Jeopardy Answer

Soliloquy