AP Language and Composition: Literary and Rhetorical Devices

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Active Voice

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43 Terms

1

Active Voice

A sentence structured so that the subject of the sentence performs the predicate, rather than the action being done to the subject.

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2

Allusion

A subtle reference to other media (another literary piece, songs, events, etc.) that the reader is familiar with.

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3

Alter-Ego

The representation of the author as a character, voicing the authors thoughts and often speaking to the audience.

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4

Anecdote

A short recounting of an event or occurrence relevant to the text, often used to develop a point or add humor.

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5

Antecedent

The noun, pronoun, clause, or phrase referred to by a pronoun.

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6

Classicism

Art characterized by realism and traditional morals/structures

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7

Comic Relief

A humorous scene or event used to lighten tension and mood

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8

Diction

The author’s choice of words and how they are used as a style (ex. formal/informal, ornate/plain).

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9

Colloquial

A familiar type conversation or exchange

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10

Connotation

The implications suggested by a word choice, as opposed to the literal meaning.

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11

Denotation

The literal meaning of a word

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12

Jargon

Diction often used within a specific group (often in a job or activity).

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13

Vernacular

The language or dialect of a specific location

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14

Didactic

Literature that teaches a lesson/moral or models the right way to think or behave

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15

Adage

A classic phrase that teaches a lesson

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16

Allegory

A story in which the characters and events reflect another concept, event, or quality.

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17

Aphorism

A statement that expresses a general principle or point (“a watched pot never boils”, “God helps them that help themselves", etc.).

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18

Ellipsis

The removal of a word, phrase, or clause in order to create a specific effect

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19

Euphemism

A more appropriate substitution for an offensive word, concept, or situation

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20

Figurative Language

Writing that is meant to represent something beyond face value

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21

Analogy

A comparison of relationships between one pair of variables to another (X is to Y as A is to B).

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22

Hyperbole

An extreme overexxageration

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23

Idiom

A non-literal expression that is widely used in conversation

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24

Metaphor

The comparison between two variables that is implied rather than outright stated.

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25

Metonymy

The replacement of an actual concept with one that is related (ex. using “The White House” in place of “The President’s Administration”).

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26

Synecdoche

Metonymy in which the whole is represented by one part, or one part is represented by the whole (“check out my new wheels”).

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27

Simile

A direct comparison between two variables using “like”, “as”, or other similar words

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28

Synesthesia

A description in which two senses are used to convey characteristics (“purplish scent”, “deafening colors”).

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29

Personification

The humanization or presence of human qualities in a variable that is not human

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30

Foreshadowing

The hinting of an event that will occur later in a story

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31

Genre

A categorization in which a literary work is sorted into: largely prose, poetry, and drama, however those can be further divided.

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32

Gothic

Writing with a strong presence of themes with gloom, mystery, fear, and death.

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33

Imagery

The use of words to create an image in the mind of the reader, typically done by invoking the senses.

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34

Invective

A long, highly critical, and/or rude use of language

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35

Irony

When the opposite of what one expects to happen occurs

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36

Verbal Irony

When something is said but the meaning is either opposite or different.

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37

Dramatic Irony

When the audience of a work knows more than the characters

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38

Situational Irony

When the outcome of a situation is entirely different than expected.

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39

Juxtaposition

The placing of two things next to each other in order to compare them

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40

Mood

The atmosphere created by the author through diction, syntax, and more.

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41

Motif

A recurring theme, idea, or feature in a piece of literature.

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42

Oxymoron

The grouping of two contradictory terms

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43

Pacing

The speed/tempo of the writing, often created through syntax, meter, anaphora, and more.

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