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English Terms

  • 03-06-2014 1:02pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭


    These are the english vocab below.



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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 589 ✭✭✭coolerboy


    Alliteration - the repetition of the same consonant sound, especially at the beginning of several consecutive words in the same line e.g. ‘Five miles meandering in a mazy motion’. (From ‘Kubla Khan’ by Samuel Taylor Coleridge).
    Aside – words spoken by a character on stage that are not intended to be heard by the other characters present
    Assonance – the repetition of similar vowel sounds e.g. ‘There must be Gods thrown down and trumpets blown’ (From ‘Hyperion’ by John Keats), showing the paired assonance of ‘must’ and ‘trum...’ and ‘thrown’ and ‘blown’
    Atmosphere – the pervading feeling created by a description of the setting, or the action e.g foreboding, happiness
    Audience – the people being communicated to
    Aural imagery – images created through sound, by the use of techniques such as alliteration, assonance and onomatopoeia
    Autobiography – an account of a person’s life written by him or herself
    Biography – a written account or history of the life of an individual
    Blank verse – unrhymed poetry that adheres to a strict pattern in that each line is an iambic pentameter (a ten-syllable line with five stresses). It is close to the rhythm of speech or prose
    Characterisation – the variety of techniques that writers use to create and present their characters, including description of their appearance, their actions, their speech and how other characters react to them
    Climax – The most important event in the story or play
    Connotation – an association attached to a word or phrase in addition to its dictionary definition.
    Denouement – near the ending of a play, novel, or drama, where the plot is resolved
    Direct speech – the words that are actually spoken
    Drama – a composition intended for performance before an audience
    Dramatic incitement – the incident which provides the starting point for the main action of the play
    Dramatic Irony – a situation in a play, the irony of which is clear to the audience but not to the characters e.g in Twelfth Night, where Olivia and Orsino do not know that ‘Cesario’ (Viola) is really a girl disguised as a boy
    Episode – a scene within a narrative that develops or is connected to the main story
    Exposition – the opening of the play which introduces characters and sets the scene
    Fact – something which has been established as true and correct
    Fiction – a story that is invented, not factual, though it may be based on events that actually happened
    Form – the way a poem is structured or laid out
    Free Verse – a form of poetry not using obvious rhyme patterns or a consistent metre
    Iambic Pentameter – a line of verse containing five feet, each foot having an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable
    Imagery – the use of words to create a picture or image in the reader’s mind
    Imperatives – commands
    Interior monologue – similar to a soliloquy, a character talking to him or herself
    Interview – a meeting between two people – e.g a journalist and a celebrity using questioning and discussion to ascertain information or for entertainment value
    Irony – the conveyance of a meaning that is opposite to the literal meaning of the words, e.g ‘This is a fine time to tell me’, (when it is actually an inappropriate time); a situation or outcome which has a significance unforeseen at the time
    Language of Advertising – features and techniques commonly found in advertising, e.g appealing adjectives, exaggeration
    Metaphor – figure of speech in which a person or thing is describes as being the thing it resembles, e.g ‘she’s a tiger’ to describe a ferocious person
    Mood - the atmosphere created by a piece of writing
    Narration, first person – the telling of a story through the voice of a character, in their own words, e.g “I went to the fair, even though I hated it”
    Narration, third person – the telling of a story through the voice of the author, describing the actions of the characters, e.g ‘He went to the fair, even though he hated it’
    Narrative Structure – the way that a piece of story writing has been put together, for example, in a novel, the development of the plot through the arrangement of chapters and who is telling the story
    Narrative techniques – the ways in which an author tells a story
    Narrator – the person telling the story
    Objective information – factual ideas
    Onomatopoeia – when a word sounds like the noise it describes e.g ‘pop’ or ‘the murmuring of innumerable bees’
    Opinion – a view held by some but not necessarily by others
    Personification – the attribution of human qualities or feelings to inanimate objects; a kind of metaphor where human qualities are given to things or abstract ideas
    Plot – the main story or scheme of connected events running through a play or novel
    Poetic Voice – the ‘speaker’ of the poem – the ‘voice’ of the poem might be that of the poet but could be that of a character or persona from the poet’s imagination
    Preview – a kind of report on a film, programme or book etc, soon to be released
    Prose – any kind of writing which is not verse, usually divided into fiction and non-fiction
    Purpose – the reason for the communication
    Regular metre – a regular succession of groups of long and short, stressed and unstressed syllables in which poetry is often written
    Review – usually a kind of report on a film, programme or book etc, already released
    Rhetorical Question – question raised in speech that does not require an answer (used for effect)
    Rhyme – corresponding sounds in words, often at the end of each line or within lines
    Rhyming Couplet – two rhyming lines of verse
    Rhythm – the ‘movement’ of a poem, as created by the metre and the way that language is stressed within the poem
    Setting – the period of time and the place in which the story is set
    Simile – figure of speech in which a person or thing is describes as being like another, usually preceded by ‘as’ or ‘like’, e.g ‘she’s like a tiger’ to describe a ferocious person
    Snapshots – separate descriptions of the stages in a sequence
    Soliloquy – a speech in which a character in a play, expresses their thoughts and feelings aloud for the benefit of the audience, but not for the other characters, often in a revealing way
    Stanza – the blocks of lines into which a poem is divided, forming a definite pattern
    Stream of Consciousness – a narrative form where random thoughts give the impression that the words have spilled straight from the narrator’s mind
    Structure – the way that a piece of story writing has been put together, for example, in a novel, the development of the plot through the arrangement of chapters
    Style – (literary) the particular way in which writers use language to express their ideas
    Subjective information – personal opinions and feelings
    Sub-Plot – a less important part of a story, that is connected to and develops the main plot
    Symbolism – similar to imagery: symbols are things that represent something else e.g red roses are given to loved ones because they symbolise love
    Theme – a central idea that the writer explores through a text, e.g love, loss, revenge
    Tone – created through the combined effects of the author’s rhythm and diction
    Voice – the speaker of the poem or prose, either the poet or author’s own voice or that of an invented character


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