Jan 12, 2016
THIS
IS
With
Host...
Your
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400 400 400 400 400 400
500 500 500 500 500 500
Literary Terms
Nonfiction Fiction Drama Poetry Rhetoric
Attitude of the author toward the reader, the people or events in a literary work
A 100
The writer’s or the speaker’s distinctive word choice
A 200
The perspective or vantage point where the story is
limited to a single character
A 300
Ideas, customs, behaviors, or institutions are ridiculed for
the purpose of improving society
A 400
Novel about the education and maturation of a young
person
A 500
The audience for the Declaration of Sentiments
B 100
According to the Preamble, this is the purpose of the
Constitution
B 200
DAILY DOUBLE
C 400
DAILY DOUBLE
Place A Wager
According to Emerson, these are the TWO things that keep us from
practicing “self-reliance”
B 300
The literary term demonstrated in the following quote: “we have
remonstrated, we have petitioned, we have protested”
B 400
Name TWO of the aspects of either Literary Realism or
Naturalism.
You must choose one before responding.
B 500
C 100
The point of view of Huckleberry Finn
Give TWO elements of Poe’s Playbook (author style)
C 200
Give THREE elements of American Gothic
(literary formula/pattern)
C 300
DAILY DOUBLE
C 400
DAILY DOUBLE
Place A Wager
The novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn juxtaposes TWO literary movements.
Define juxtapose and then identify the two literary
movements.
C 400
Identify the primary conflict and resolution of Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn
C 500
“I say--I say--God is dead!”
D 100
“Let *you* beware, Mr. Danforth. Do you think yourself so mighty the Devil may not turn *your* wits?"
D 200
“The magistrate sits in your heart that judges you. I never thought you but a good man…”
D 300
“You must understand, sir, that a person is either with
this court or he must be counted against it, there be no
road between.”
D 400
This character clearly understands the underlying
motives of the play:
“private vengeance is working through this testimony”
D 500
The literary technique of listing
E 100
Repetition at the beginning of lines or phrases
E 200
The use of words where the intended meaning departs
from the literal meaning; ex: metaphor
E 300
The intended effect of repetition
E 400
The intended impact of parallelism
E 500
The formation of mental pictures through descriptive
language
F 100
The appeal to reason, often accomplished through facts
and research
F 200
The appeal to emotion, often achieved through imagery
and loaded language
F 300
The appeal to authority, often achieved by establishing
credibility through position or by citing experts
F 400
Viewing multiple interpretations of rhetoric
intensifies the impact of what persuasive appeal.
EXPLAIN.
F 500
The Final Jeopardy Category is:
America
Please record your wager.
This will be a turned in written response.
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Final Jeopardy:
How is America defined through texts? Give one “American” quality or idea and give three examples of where that idea is
present in our literature.
Thank You for Playing Jeopardy!
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