Title: English 12
1English 12
2Literary Terms
- Allegory An extended narrative in prose or verse
in which characters, events, and settings
represent abstract qualities where the writer
intends a second meaning to be read beneath the
surface story - Eg. The Faerie Queen by Edmund Spenser (written
in 1590) - Spenser only completed half of The Faerie Queene
he planned. In a letter to Sir John Walter
Raleigh, he explained the purpose and structure
of the poem. It is an allegory, a story whose
characters and events nearly all have a specific
symbolic meaning. The poem's setting is a
mythical "Faerie land," ruled by the Faerie
Queene. Spenser sets forth in the letter that
this "Queene" represents his own monarch, Queen
Elizabeth. -
3- Allusion A passing reference to historical of
fictional character, places, or events, or to
other works that the writer assumes the reader
will recognize. - Eg. Bible
- From HAMLET by William Shakespeare
- O, my offence is rank it smells to heavenIt
hath the primal eldest curse upon't,A brother's
murder. Pray can I not,Though inclination be as
sharp as willMy stronger guilt defeats my
strong intentAnd, like a man to double business
bound,I stand in pause where I shall first
begin,And both neglect. What if this cursed
handWere thicker than itself with brother's
blood,Is there not rain enough in the sweet
heavensTo wash it white as snow?(2.3)
The underlined section makes reference to the
slaying of Abel by Cain in the Bible
4- AnalogyA comparison of similar things for the
purpose of making something unfamiliar to seem
familiar - Eg. River system compared to a tree
- DIFFERS FROM METAPHOR AND SIMILE BECAUSE
- Metaphor and simile often make unexpected and
creative comparisons
5- Aphorism A statement of a principle or truth,
usually an observation about life - Eg. The happiest of women, like the happiest
nations, have no history - George Eliot Mary Ann Evans
- (22 November 1819 22 December 1880),
- better known by her pen name
- George Eliot, was an
- English novelist. Her most famous
- work is MIDDLEMARCH (1871-72),
6- Apostrophe In poetry, when an absent person, an
abstract concept, or an important object is
directly addressed - Eg. Paradise Lost by John Milton begins with an
invocation to the heavenly muse - Sing, Heavenly Muse
7- Aside In drama, a convention by which actors
speak briefly to the audience - Eg. Shakespeares Hamlet A little more than
kin, and less than kind (1.2. line 65) - Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds but
not consonant sounds as in consonance - Eg. Fleet feet sweep by sleeping geeks.
8- Ballad A form of narrative poetry that presents
a single dramatic episode, which is often tragic
or violent. Often meant to be sung. - Folk ballad Composed anonymously and transmitted
orally from generation to generationsung or
recited. Dealt with common people rather than
nobility and the supernatural played an important
role - Eg. Bonnie George Campbell
- Hie upon the Highlands, and laigh upon the
Tay,Bonnie George Campbell rode, out on a
day.He saddled, he bridled, and gallant rode
he,And hame came his guid horse, but never cam
he.Out cam his mother, dear, greeting fu
sair,And out cam his bonnie bryde, riving her
hair."The meadow lies green the corn is
unshornBut bonnie George Campbell will never
return.Saddled and bridled and booted rode
he,A plume in his helment, a sword at his
knee.but toom cam his saddle, all bloody to
seeOh, hame cam his guid horse, but never cam he
9- Ballads continued
- Literary Ballads More polished and consciously
artful than folk ballads and contain more
elevated language and poetric diction - Eg. Samuel Taylor Coleridges
- Rime of the Ancient Mariner
10- Ballad Stanza The stanza form of the ballad,
usually four lines rhyming abcb - The first and the third lines typically contain
four accented syllables, the second and the
fourth lines, three accented syllables - A refrain (repeated line found elsewhere in the
same position) at the end of the stanza is common
11Iambic Meterthe stress in each line falls on
every other syllable
Rhyme Scheme
Q U A T R A I N
1st 3rd 8 syllables 2nd 4th 6 syllables
It was in and about the Martinmas timeWhen the
green leaves were a-falling, That Sir John
Graeme, in the West Country, fell in love with
Barbara AllanHe sent his men down through the
townTo the place where she was dwelling O
haste and come to my master dear,Gin ye be
Barbara AllanO hooly, hooly rose she up,To
the place where he was lyingAnd when she drew
the curtain by,Young man, I think youre
dying.O its Im sick, and very sick,And its
a for Barbara AllanO the better for me yes
never be,Though your hearts blood were a
spilling.
A B C B
Narrative Style
REPETITION
Language is Simple and straightforward
The young man is love sick
12- Blank Verse A verse consisting of unrhymed lines
of iambic pentameter. - (ten syllables per line)
- Eg. Was this the face that launched a thousand
ships - And burned the topless towers of Illium?
- Sweet Helen, make me immortal with a kiss
- Christopher Marlowes Dr. Faustus
13- Caesura A pause within a line of poetry often
resulting from the natural rhythm of language and
not necessarily indicated by punctuation
14- Caricature Descriptive writing that exaggerates
specific features of appearance or personality,
usually for comic effect
15- Chorus A character whose role is to comment on
the actions of the main character
16- Comedy Any literary work that aims to amuse by
dealing with humorous, familiar situations
involving ordinary people speaking everyday
language
17- Conceit An elaborate figure of speech comparing
two very dissimilar things. - Eg. My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun
(Sonnet 130) by William Shakespeare - My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun
- Coral is far more red than her lips' red
- If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun
- If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.
- I have seen roses damasked, red and white,
- Consonance The close repetition of identical
consonant sounds before and after differing vowel
sounds. It is NOT necessarily (but can be)
alliteration - Eg. forever, over
18- Couplet Two consectuive lines of poetry that
rhyme and that are written in the same meter or
pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables - Eg. Three be the things I shall have till I die
- Laughter and hope and a sock in the eye
- by Dorothy Parker from Inventory
19- Denotation The dictionary definition of a work.
Opposite of CONNOTATION. - Dialect The version of a language spoken by
people of a particular region or social group
20- Diary A journal or personal reflection and
record of the daily life of a person. - Diction Word choice. Two basic standards
- Clear diction is both precise and concrete with
strong verbs. - Appropriate diction is diction at a levelformal,
informal, colloquial, slangsuitable to the
occasion
21- Dissonance Words that are put together in such a
way as to be awkward for effect. - Dramatic Monologue A poem in which a single
character, overheard speaking to a silent
listener, reveals a dramatic situation. - Eg. Robert Browning My Last Duchess
22- Elegy A poem of sorrow or mourning for the dead.
- Eg. Thomas Grays Elegy Written in a Country
Churchyard
23- English or Shakepearean SonnetA fixed form
consisting of fourteen lines of 5-foot iambic
verse. Its arranged into three quatrains rhyming
abab, cdcd, efef, followed by a rhyimg couplet
gg, which sums up the poem. - Epic A long narrative poem in loftyl style set
in a remote time and place, and dealing with
heroic character and deeds important in the
legends and history of a nation or race.
24- Epigram Any witty, pointed saying.
- Eg. She knows the cost of everything and the
value of nothing. - Figurative Language Language the contains the
figures of speech such as metaphor, simile,
personification and hyperbole. - Foil A character who, by contrast, points up the
qualities or characteristics of another
character. - Form The organizing principle that shapes a work
of literature.
25- Free Verse Poetry that doesnt follow a set form
or rhyme scheme. - Genre A type of literary work.
- Heroic Couplet A pair of rhyming iambic
pentameter lines. - Hyperbole Exaggeration for dramatic effect. Used
to create humour OR emphasis. - Eg. A section from Andrew Marvells To His Coy
Mistress - My vegetable love should growVaster than
empires, and more slowAn hundred years should
go to praiseThine eyes and on thy forehead
gazeTwo hundred to adore each breast,But
thirty thousand to the restAn age at least to
every part,And the last age should show your
heart.For, Lady, you deserve this state,Nor
would I love at lower rate.
26- Iambic Pentameter A poetic line of five iambic
feet.
What is Iambic Pentameter? Ten syllables in each
line Five pairs of alternating unstressed and
stressed syllables The rhythm in each line
sounds like ba-BUM / ba-BUM / ba-BUM / ba-BUM /
ba-BUM If mu- / -sic be / the food / of love, /
play on Is this / a dag- / -ger I / see be- /
fore me?
27- Image Language referring to something that can
be perceived through one or more of the senses. - Imagery The making of pictures in words, the
pictorial quality of a literary work achieved
through a collection of images.
28- In medias res Literally in the middle of. When
a piece of literature begins in the middle of the
action/story then using flashbacks in order to
fill in the beginning of the story. - Internal rhyme The rhyming of two or more words
in the same line of poetry. - Inversion Reversing the normal order of sentence
partsusually to ask a question.
29- Invocation At the beginning of an epic, an
appeal to a god or godess for inspiration. - Irony In the broadest sense, the recognition of
the incongruity or difference between reality
(what is) and appearance (what seems to be). - Situational The difference between what is
expected to happen and what actually occurs. - Verbal Irony Contrast between what is said and
what is actually meant. (Sarcasm is a harsh form
of this)
30- Italian or Petrarchan Sonnet A sonnet that is
organized into two parts - Octave consists of the first eight lines of the
poem rhyming abba, abba - Sestet the final six lines of the poem, rhyming
cde, cde. The octave is the question and the
sestet is the answer/resolve. -
31- Kenning A metaporic compound owrd or phrase used
as a synony for a common noun. - Eg. Beowulf ring bestower
- Lyric Poem A poem that expresses the emotions
and thoughts of the author
32- Metaphysical (poetry) A term applied to the
poetry of John Donne and several other
seventeenth-century poets such as Andrew Marvell.
This poetry rebells against the conventional love
poetry of the Elizabethans. - Meter The fixed (or nearly fixed) pattern of
accented and unaccented syllables in the lines of
a poem that produces its pervasive rhythm. Basic
unit of rhythm is the FOOT, consisting of at
least one accented syllable and one or more
unaccented syllables.
33- Metonymy A figure of speech that substitutes the
name of a related object, person, or idea for the
subject at hand. - Eg. Crownmonarchy
- White HousePresident of United States
- Shakespeareworks of Shakespeare
- Mock Epic A literary work that comically or
satirically imitates the form and style of the
epic, treating a trivial subject in a lofty
manner. - Eg. The Rape of the Lock by Alexander Pope
34- Motif A recurring image, word, phrase, action,
idea, object, or situation throughout a literary
work - A recounting of a series of actual or fictional
events in which some connection between the
events is established or implied. - Octave See Italian/Petrarchan Sonnet
35- Ode A long and elaborate lyric poem, usually
dignified in tone and often written to praise
someone or something or to mark an important
occasion. - Eg. Ode to the West Wind by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Oxymoron A figure of speech in which two
contradictory words or phrases are combined in a
single expression, giving the effect of a
condensed paradox. - Eg. Wise Fool, Living death, cruel kindness
36- Paradox A statement, while apparently
self-contradictory, is nonetheless essentially
true. - Parallelism The technique of showing that words,
phrases, clauses, or larger structures are
comparable in content and importance by placing
them side by side and making them similar in
form. - Eg. Halcyon Days by Walt Whitman
-
- Not from successful love alone,
- Nor wealth, nor honord middle age, nor
victories of politics - or war
- But as life wanes, and all the turbulent
passions calm - As gorgeous vapory, silent hues cover the
evening sky, - As softness, fulness, rest ,suffuse the frame,
like fresher, - balmier air,
- As the days take on a mellower light, and the
apple at last - Hangs really finishd and indolent-ripe on the
tree, - Then for the teeming quietest, happiest days of
all! - The brooding and blissful halcyon days!
37- Parody A piece that ridicules another
composition by imitating and exaggerating aspects
of its content, structure and style. - Pastoral A poem having to do with shepherds and
rural life - Pentameter See iambic pentameter
38- Persona The voice or mask created by the author
through which a story is told. - Petrarchan or Italian Sonnet The basic meter of
all sonnets in English is iambic pentameter.
Divided into two sections by two different groups
of rhyming sounds. The first 8 lines is called
the octave and rhymes a b b a a b b a The
remaining 6 lines is called the sestet and can
have either two or three rhyming sounds, arranged
in a variety of ways - c d c d c dc d d c d cc d e c d ec d e c e dc
d c e d cThe point here is that the poem is
divided into two sections by the two differing
rhyme groups. This change occurs at the beginning
of L9 in the Italian sonnet and is called the
volta, or "turn" the turn is an essential
element of the sonnet form, perhaps the essential
element. It is at the volta that the second idea
is introduced.
39- Point of view The view from which as story is
told. - 1st Person Uses I
- Omniscient God-like narrator. Knows thoughts
and feelings of all characters - Limited omniscient/third person God-like
narrator that only follows one character - Dramatic or objective A play
- Second Person Uses you
40- Protagonist The main character of a story. Can
be an anti-hero (bad guy) - Pun A play on words
- Quatrain Four line stanza
- Refrain A group of words repeated at intervals
during a poemusually at the end of a stanza - Rhyme similar sound between two words.
- Rhyme Scheme patterns of rhymes in a stanza or
poem. Usually indicated by letters of the
alphabet (abba)
41- Rhythm The patterned flow of sound in poetry and
prose - Romanticism Movement in art and literature in
18th 19th centuries in revolt against
neoclassicism. Literature depicting emotional
matter in an imaginative form. - Satire Literature that uses ironic humour and
wit with criticism for the purpose of ridiculing
folly, vice for the purpose of making positive
change.
42- Sestet See Italian/petrarchan sonnet
- Setting The time and place of a story
- Shakespearean/English sonnet See English sonnet
- Simile Comparison using like or as
- Soliloquy A dramatic convention in which a
character in a play, alone of stage, speaks his
or her thoughts aloud. - Eg. To be or Not to be speech in Hamlet
- Sonnet 14 line lyric poem
43- Speaker The voice of a poem. The poet may be
speaking as him/herself or take on a mask. - Spenserian Stanza A stanza pattern, creatied by
Edmund Spenser that consists of nine lines in
iambic meter rhyming ababbcbcc. - Stanza A paragraph or section of poetry
- StyleA writers characteristic way of saying
things. It may be the arrangement of ideas, word
choice, use of lit decvices, sentence structure,
rhythm etc.
44- Repetition The repeating of a word or phrase for
dramatic effect. - Synecdoche A figure of speech in which a part of
something stands for the whole thing. - Eg. Ive got wheels (wheelscar), The sails were
seen on the horizon (sailsboats). - Syntax The arrangement and grammatical relation
of words, phrases and clauses in sentences.
45- Tercet A three line stanza.
- Terza rima A form of verse composed of tercets
linked by rhyme abc, bcb, cdc, ded and so on. - Tetrameter A line of poetry compsed of four
metrical feet (eight syllables). - Tone The reflection in a work of the authors
attitude toward his or her subject, characters,
and readers. - Eg. Brusque, friendly, teasing etc.
46- Theme The central or dominating ideas, the
message implicit in a work. (Remember that when
you are writing about theme, you must create a
theme statement!) - Tragedy In simplest termsthe protagonist dies
due to a fatal flaw/error in judgment/twist of
fate. - Trimeter A line of poetry consisting of three
metrical feet (six syllables/line)
47- Villanelle A lyric poem made up of five stanzas
of three lines plus a final stanza of four lines.
Aba, abaa. - Eg. Do not go gentle into that good night by
Dylan Thomas - Voice A term to identify the sense a written
work conveys to a reader of its writers
attitude, personality, and character. - Volta Also called a turn, a volta is a sudden
change in thought, direction, or emotion near the
conclusion of a sonnet.
48- Wit The ability to make brilliant, imaginative,
or clever connections between ideas. - Proverb A short saying that expresses some
commonplace truth or bit of folk wisdom
concerning some aspect of practical life. - Eg. A friend in need is a friend indeed
- A rolling stone gathers no moss
- Thesis The topic sentence that states the
central argument of a piece of writing
49- Jargon Language specific to a particular
profession. - Eg. Medical jargon
- Colloquial Language A word or phrase in everyday
use in conversation and informal writing, but
sometimes inappropriate in formal writing. - Eg. Carol wont let on, but I know shes down in
the dumps.
50- Euphemism A kinder, gentler way of saying
something thats negative. - Eg. He passed on (instead of he died)
- Direct presentation When the author states what
a character is like. - Indirect presentation When the author asks the
reader to deduce from his/her actions what a
character is like.