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Use these definitions to supplement yours The 50 (or more) Terms
32

Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Dec 16, 2015

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Loraine Owens
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Page 1: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Use these definitions to supplement yours

The 50 (or more) Terms

Page 2: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Uncertainty of meaning or intentionEx: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Ambiguity

Page 3: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Main point or idea of an essay

Ex: Columbus day should not be celebrated due to the violent and negative affects of his actions upon Native-American culture

Thesis

Page 4: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Making a comparison using “like” or “as”

Ex: Life is like a box of chocolates

Simile

Page 5: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Repetition of vowel soundsEx: Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed

hornEx: I bomb atomically- Socrates’ philosophies

and hypotheses can’t define how I be droppin’ these mockeries

Ex: And in my hour of darkness, she is standing right in front of me/ speaking words of wisdom, “let it be”.

Assonance

Page 6: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

A figure of speech in which the phrase seems to have a self-contradictory effect

Ex: bitter-sweetEx: nice-nasty

Oxymoron

Page 7: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

A statement that seems self-contradictory, but in reality, expresses truth

Ex: I always tell lies, This sentence is false

Paradox

Page 8: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

a stylistic device in which one implicitly references a related object or circumstance that has occurred or existed in an external context. An allusion is understandable only to those with prior knowledge of the reference in question (as the writer assumes the reader has). An "allusion" is not the same as an "illusion".

Ex: Utopian discordEx: T.S. Elliot’s The Waste Land alludes to

Shakespeare, Dante, and Milton

Allusion

Page 9: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

The Gaslight Anthem in the song “High Lonesome”(2008): “And Maria came from Nashville with a suitcase in her hand, I kinda sorta wished I had looked like Elvis” alludes to:

The Counting Crows’ song “Round Here” (1994): “Maria came from Nashville with a suitcase in her hand, she says she would like to meet a boy who looks like Elvis”

Allusion: Example

Page 10: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

This occurs when the audience or reader knows something a character does not know

This is a great way to build tension and interest into plot

Think of horror movies…

Dramatic Irony

Page 11: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Dramatic Irony

Page 12: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

A figure of speech when what is said is opposite is what is meant

“Break a leg”

Verbal Irony

Page 13: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

When the outcome of a play, story, or event is the opposite of what was expected.

Situational Irony

Page 14: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

a figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in  order to suggest a resemblance

Ex: Your friend is a big babyEx: You are my guardian angelEx: The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want;

he makes me lie down in green pastures.

Metaphor

Page 15: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

This occurs when the author tells the reader exactly what a character is thinking, feeling, or is like

The author “tells” usEd Johnson scratched his head in confusion

as the sales rep explained Dralco’s newest engine performance diagnostic computer. The old mechanic hated modern electronics, preferring the old days when all he needed was a stack of manuals and a good set of tools.

Direct Characterization

Page 16: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

the writer reveals information about a character and his personality through that character's thoughts, words, and actions, along with how other characters respond to that character, including what they think and say about him.

“That Ed Johnson,” said Anderson, watching the old mechanic scratch his head in confusion as the sales rep explained Dralco’s newest engine performance diagnostic computer. “He hasn’t got a clue about modern electronics. Give him a good set of tools and a stack of yellowing manuals with a carburetor needing repair, and he’d be happy as a hungry frog in a fly-field.”

Indirect Characterization

Page 17: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

a question asked solely to produce an effect or to make an assertion and not to elicit a reply

Ex: Why Me?Ex: Does a one-legged duck swim in a circle?

Rhetorical Question

Page 18: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Original model or patternthe original pattern or model from which all t

hings of  the same kind are copied or on which they are based; a  model or first form

Ex: The Tragic Hero, The Villain, The Damsel in Distress, The Evil Stepmother, The Hero. The Sage

Odysseus, Oedipus, The Devil

Archetype

Page 19: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

a comparison between two things that are similar in some way, often used to help explain something or make it easier to understand

eye:sight::teeth:chewhand:elbow::foot:kneemeow:cat::bark:dogbaby:adult::puppy:dog

Analogy

Page 20: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Words the Author uses to appeal to our senses

Kinesthetic, Organic, Auditory, Tactile, Visual, Olefactory, Gustatory

Imagery

Page 21: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Words that describe movement or tensionEx: Superman was faster than a speeding

bullet

Kinesthetic Imagery

Page 22: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Something that appears through sight

“The cottages up to their shining eyes in snow”

Visual Imagery

Page 23: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Representation of sound,Can be Onomatopoeia Ex: “The scythe whispering to the ground”

Auditory Imagery

Page 24: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Words that represent smellEx: “The musk from hidden grapevine springs

Olfactory Imagery

Page 25: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Words that represent taste“The walking boots that taste of Atlantic and

Pacific salt”

Gustatory Imagery

Page 26: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Words that represent touchHardness, softness, wetness, heat, cold“The bed linens must just as well be ice and

the clothes snow”

Tactile Imagery

Page 27: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Internal sensationsHunger, Fear, thirst, fatigue, nausea“My heart owns a doubt, It costs no inward

struggle not to go”

Organic Imagery

Page 28: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

A story with two or more levels of meaning; a literal level and a symbolic, figurative level.

Ex: The Matrix, The Prodigal Son, Animal Farm, The Never Ending Story

Allegory

Page 29: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

The Repetition of initial consonant soundsTounge TwistersGarry’s giraffe gobbled gooseberry’s greedily,

getting good at grabbing goodiesPeter’s piglet pranced priggishly

Alliteration

Page 30: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Obvious exaggeration for effect

I could eat a million waffle friesYour mama is so skinny she can hula hoop

with a Cheerio

Hyperbole

Page 31: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

The author’s attitude towards their audience or subject

Ex: angry, bored, comical, playful, arrogant, ignorant

Tone

Page 32: Use these definitions to supplement yours. Uncertainty of meaning or intention Ex: “I can’t recommend this book too highly”

Form of rhetoric in which one person attacks the other instead of the issue being debated.

“What do you know? You’re just a kid”“That’s stupid”Usually used to deflect one’s own ignorance

towards the subject

Ad Hominem Argument