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  1. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT Glossary of Common Literary Terms Allegory: an allegory is a narrative in which the characters often stand for abstract concepts. An allegory generally teaches a lesson by means of an interesting story. Alliteration: the repetition at close intervals of consonant sounds for a purpose. For example: wailing in the winter wind.

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  2. own life. emotions. Examples: ballad, blank verse, free verse, elegy, limerick, sonnet. Biography: A writer’s account of some other person’s life. Comedy: Writing that deals with life in a humorous way, often poking fun at people’s mistakes. as it really is. Drama: Also called a play, this writing form uses

  3. 2. is a category system that literature falls into based on specific conventions that develop to ferences. 3. can be verbal, situational or dramatic and has the result of the meaning, situation or action being ferent. 4. is a type of literary work that satirizes another work, its author or the ideas presented. 5. . 6. is where a story takes place.

  4. Free Verse – flowing lines, usually unrhymed, that vary in length and with no fixed meter. Genre – A type of literature Example: Epic or Tragedy Heroic Couplet – Two lines of rhyming iambic pentameter. Hyperbole – Exaggeration or overstatement used to emphasize a point rather than to be taken literally.

  5. For example, the introduction of antiseptics in 1867. It was also used in different ways: a form of entertainment involved 'spectacles' where paranormal events, such as hypnotism, communication with the dead, ghost conjuring and the like, were carried out to the delight of crowds and participants. Progress in the Victorian era: most of the

  6. Apr 1, 2000 · The Oxford Companion To English Literature, 6th Edition. Addeddate 2020-12-15 19:40:49 Coverleaf 0 Identifier

  7. The object of this exercise is to correctly label each example with the proper literary term. ord Bank:. No term will be used more than once. Some terms will not be used. Directions: Match the example with one of the literary terms above. Label each item with the correct literary term. 1. . 2. The house stared angrily at its new occupants. 3.