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A List of Figurative, Literary, Grammatical, & Rhetorical Terms (AP Lang)

Allusion: a casual reference to another work of art, historical event, or person


Ambiguity: the state of having multiple meanings; an intentional or unintentional equivocation


Analogy: a form of reasoning in which one thing is inferred to be similar to another thing in a certain respect


Anecdote: a brief recounting of a relevant episode; usually to inject humor or develop a point


Aphorism: a terse statement which expresses a general truth or moral principle often in a clever way. “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.”


Apophasis: calling attention to something by dismissing it. “No one would suggest that those who are homeless elected to live on the streets willingly.”


Apostrophe: the direct address of a non-person or an absent or imaginary person. “Milton, thou shouldst be living at this hour/England hath need of thee”; may also be a personified abstraction, especially as a digression in the course of a speech or composition. “So, I ask you, dear reader, what would you have me do?”


Bathos: overdone or insincere attempts at evoking pity or compassion, usually creating a comedic effect


Claim: also called assertion or proposition, an argument’s main idea/position


Claim of fact: asserts something is true or not true


Claim of policy: proposes a change


Claim of value: argues that something is good or bad, right or wrong


Concession: the act of granting or yielding a particular point or fact that is part of another’s argument or granting that an opposing argument has some merit


Connotation: extra cultural significance of a word or phrase in addition to its dictionary definition


Context: the circumstances, atmosphere, attitudes, and events surrounding a text’s production


Counterargument: set of reasons put forward to oppose an anticipated idea or theory


Deduction: logical process starting with a general principle (major premise), apply it to a specific case (a minor premise). A syllogism is an example of deductive logic


Denotation: The literal definition of a word


Diction: word choice in speech or writing


Didactic: teaching a specific lesson or moral; providing a model of correct behavior or thinking


Ellipsis: the omission of words or phrases, sometimes indicated by the use of “ ... ”


Epigraph: a short quotation, often used at the beginning of a work, section, or chapter to introduce a theme


Euphemism: the act or an example of substituting a mild, indirect, or vague term for one considered harsh, blunt, or offensive. “The drone strike inflicted collateral damage.”


Exigency: a case or situation that demands prompt action or remedy, that has urged the writer to begin to write an argument. (The CollegeBoard loves this word this year... for some unknown reason.)


Exposition: a mode of expression, its intention being to explain


Figurative language: any language that cannot be taken literally (like simile, metaphor, verbal irony, metonymy, etc.)


Genre: the category into which a literary work fits (drama, poetry, prose being the most general, but these may be further subdivided)


Hortative sentence (hortation): one that urges, calls to action


Hyperbole: a figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect


Hypophora: a type of reasoning in which one or more questions are asked and answered by the same writer/speaker.


Induction: reasoning from particulars to universals; examples to conclusion


Infer: to draw a reasonable conclusion from information provided.


Imagery: word choice designed to appeal to one or more of the five senses

verbal irony: words used are the opposite of the intended meaning


situational irony: events turn out other than as expected


Juxtaposition: placement of two things closely together to emphasize similarity and/or difference.


Litotes: this is the strategy of understatement using two negative terms, often employed to provide subtle emphasis, frequently for ironic effect or to underline a passionate opinion. “The assassin was not unacquainted with danger.”


Logical Fallacy: an error in reasoning that may render an argument invalid


ad hominem: (literally, "against the man") when a writer personally attacks his or her opponents instead of their arguments


ad populum (bandwagon appeal): a claim supported by popularity


appeal to false authority: an author cites an individual who has no expertise to comment on the issue


circular reasoning: often called begging the question, the argument repeats the claim instead of providing evidence


either/or (false dilemma): an argument presents two extreme options as the only possible choices (politicians, ha!)


faulty analogy: an argument compares two things that are not comparable (ignoring significant differences)


hasty generalization: a faulty conclusion is reached after inadequate evidence (smoking isn’t bad; my sister has smoked for years and remains the picture of health)


non-sequitur: when one statement isn’t logically connected to another


post hoc, ergo propter hoc: when a writer implies that because one thing follows another, the first caused the second. But sequence is not cause.


red herring: when a writer raises an irrelevant issue to draw attention away from the real issue


straw man: when a writer argues against a claim that nobody actually holds or is universally considered weak. Setting up a strawman diverts attention from the real issue


Metanoia: the qualification of a statement to either diminish or strengthen its tone, as in “She was disturbed — make that appalled — by the spectacle.” Traditionally, nay is often a keyword that sets up the shift, but no replaces it in modern usage except in facetious or whimsical writing. “You are the fairest flower in the garden — nay, in the entire meadow.”


Narrative: a mode of expression, its intention being to tell a story


Paradox: the expression of seemingly contrary ideas that have an underlying truth or coexistence


Parody: the close imitation of style, usually exaggerating the features of the model for comedic effect


Pedantic: overly scholarly, academic, or bookish (connotation usually negative)


Point of view: the perspective from which the text is expressed
first person—the voice is a part of the action, usually “I, me, my, mine” pronouns
second person–referring to the audience, often with the pronouns “you, your, yours”
third person—written / spoken from an outside perspective (he, she, it, they)


Polemic (polemical): one who argues with hostility and generally does not concede opposing opinions have merit


Pun: a humorous play on the multiple meanings of a word or words: “You can tune a fiddle, but you can’t tuna fish—unless you’re a bass player.”


Refutation: working to prove an argument false


Rhetoric: the art of effective or persuasive communication


Rhetorical appeals: techniques used to persuade an audience


Logos: logic, reasoning; rhetorical appeal pertaining to the content of the message


Pathos: a quality that arouses emotions (especially pity or sorrow); the rhetorical appeal concerned with how to reach an
audience emotionally


Ethos: rhetorical appeal in which the author/speaker establishes trustworthiness of the audience; credibility


Rhetorical Question: a question asked solely to produce an effect and not to elicit a reply, as in “What is so rare as a day in June?”


Satire: a work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of human behavior by portraying it in an extreme way, often through the use of humor, and generally intended to point out a flaw and affect a change


Sentential (or Conjunctive) Adverbs: these single words or brief phrases emphasize the thought they precede, interrupt, or — rarely — follow. Examples include however, naturally, no doubt, and of course — and, in informal writing, phrases such as “you see.”


Syllogism: a logical argument often expressed in this typical form; “All A is C; all B is A; therefore all B is C.”


Symbol: an object or action that is what it is and also takes special significance for literary or rhetorical effect


Theme: what an artistic work suggests about life


Thesis: the expression of the author’s point, meaning, or position


Tone: the author’s attitude


Transition: a word, phrase, or clause that links different ideas or paragraphs


Understatement: a statement that is restrained in ironic contrast to what might have been said


Wit: the use of language that surprises and delights; it may involve particularly perceptive, humorous, or ingenious thoughts expressed
through great verbal power

Alliteration: the repetition of sounds, usually initial consonants in neighboring words. “She sells sea shells by the sea shore.”


Anaphora: a repetition of a word or of words at the beginning of two or more successive clauses; “I came, I saw, I conquered.”


Antimetabole / Chiasmus: (AN-ti-mə-TAB-ə-lee) repetition of words in reverse order (ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country)


Antistrophe (Epistrophe): repetition of a word or phrase at the close of successive clauses; “You said he was late — true enough. You said he was not prepared — true enough. You said he did not defend his statements — true enough.” “I swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” “[T]his nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people [...]”


Antithesis: opposition, or contrast, of ideas or words in a parallel construction. “Many are called, but few are chosen,” “We shall support any friends, oppose any foe”


Asyndeton: absence of conjunctions. “We cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground.”


Inversion: the reversal of the normal order of words for rhetorical effect. “Shouts the politician.”


Loose sentence: opposite of a periodic sentence, a sentence type in which the most important idea is expressed first, with dependent grammatical units following often conveying informality and a more conversational feel. “He might consider paying the higher fees at a private university, if the teacher/student ratio is small, the teachers are highly qualified, and the job placement rate is high.” “You can pass all your classes with good study habits and good attendance.” “He decided to major in science, even though he really wanted to study art, philosophy, and religion.”


Parallelism: the framing of words, phrases, or clauses to provide structural similarity and symmetry


Periodic sentence: opposite of a loose sentence, a sentence in which critical meaning comes only at the end (at the period); in this sentence type, the important independent clause is preceded by dependent phrases or clauses (its effect is often more formal and adds emphasis and variety). (e.g. “In spite of heavy snow and cold temperatures, the game continued.” “With low taxes, beautiful views and a mild climate, this city is a great place to live.”)


Polysyndeton: an insertion of conjunctions before each word/phrase in a list. “My fellow students read and studied and wrote and passed. I laughed and played and talked and failed.”


Repetition: speaking or writing something again for rhetorical effect


Syntax: the way an author arranges words and phrases into sentences


Zeugma: a use of word(s) in a grammatically similar way that produce different meanings. “My teeth and ambition are bared—Be prepared!” “When you open a book, you open your mind.” “Now the trumpet summons us again—not as a call to bear arms, though arms we need; not as a call to battle, though embattled we are—but a call to bear the burden of a long twilight struggle...”

ME

A List of Figurative, Literary, Grammatical, & Rhetorical Terms (AP Lang)

Allusion: a casual reference to another work of art, historical event, or person


Ambiguity: the state of having multiple meanings; an intentional or unintentional equivocation


Analogy: a form of reasoning in which one thing is inferred to be similar to another thing in a certain respect


Anecdote: a brief recounting of a relevant episode; usually to inject humor or develop a point


Aphorism: a terse statement which expresses a general truth or moral principle often in a clever way. “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.”


Apophasis: calling attention to something by dismissing it. “No one would suggest that those who are homeless elected to live on the streets willingly.”


Apostrophe: the direct address of a non-person or an absent or imaginary person. “Milton, thou shouldst be living at this hour/England hath need of thee”; may also be a personified abstraction, especially as a digression in the course of a speech or composition. “So, I ask you, dear reader, what would you have me do?”


Bathos: overdone or insincere attempts at evoking pity or compassion, usually creating a comedic effect


Claim: also called assertion or proposition, an argument’s main idea/position


Claim of fact: asserts something is true or not true


Claim of policy: proposes a change


Claim of value: argues that something is good or bad, right or wrong


Concession: the act of granting or yielding a particular point or fact that is part of another’s argument or granting that an opposing argument has some merit


Connotation: extra cultural significance of a word or phrase in addition to its dictionary definition


Context: the circumstances, atmosphere, attitudes, and events surrounding a text’s production


Counterargument: set of reasons put forward to oppose an anticipated idea or theory


Deduction: logical process starting with a general principle (major premise), apply it to a specific case (a minor premise). A syllogism is an example of deductive logic


Denotation: The literal definition of a word


Diction: word choice in speech or writing


Didactic: teaching a specific lesson or moral; providing a model of correct behavior or thinking


Ellipsis: the omission of words or phrases, sometimes indicated by the use of “ ... ”


Epigraph: a short quotation, often used at the beginning of a work, section, or chapter to introduce a theme


Euphemism: the act or an example of substituting a mild, indirect, or vague term for one considered harsh, blunt, or offensive. “The drone strike inflicted collateral damage.”


Exigency: a case or situation that demands prompt action or remedy, that has urged the writer to begin to write an argument. (The CollegeBoard loves this word this year... for some unknown reason.)


Exposition: a mode of expression, its intention being to explain


Figurative language: any language that cannot be taken literally (like simile, metaphor, verbal irony, metonymy, etc.)


Genre: the category into which a literary work fits (drama, poetry, prose being the most general, but these may be further subdivided)


Hortative sentence (hortation): one that urges, calls to action


Hyperbole: a figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect


Hypophora: a type of reasoning in which one or more questions are asked and answered by the same writer/speaker.


Induction: reasoning from particulars to universals; examples to conclusion


Infer: to draw a reasonable conclusion from information provided.


Imagery: word choice designed to appeal to one or more of the five senses

verbal irony: words used are the opposite of the intended meaning


situational irony: events turn out other than as expected


Juxtaposition: placement of two things closely together to emphasize similarity and/or difference.


Litotes: this is the strategy of understatement using two negative terms, often employed to provide subtle emphasis, frequently for ironic effect or to underline a passionate opinion. “The assassin was not unacquainted with danger.”


Logical Fallacy: an error in reasoning that may render an argument invalid


ad hominem: (literally, "against the man") when a writer personally attacks his or her opponents instead of their arguments


ad populum (bandwagon appeal): a claim supported by popularity


appeal to false authority: an author cites an individual who has no expertise to comment on the issue


circular reasoning: often called begging the question, the argument repeats the claim instead of providing evidence


either/or (false dilemma): an argument presents two extreme options as the only possible choices (politicians, ha!)


faulty analogy: an argument compares two things that are not comparable (ignoring significant differences)


hasty generalization: a faulty conclusion is reached after inadequate evidence (smoking isn’t bad; my sister has smoked for years and remains the picture of health)


non-sequitur: when one statement isn’t logically connected to another


post hoc, ergo propter hoc: when a writer implies that because one thing follows another, the first caused the second. But sequence is not cause.


red herring: when a writer raises an irrelevant issue to draw attention away from the real issue


straw man: when a writer argues against a claim that nobody actually holds or is universally considered weak. Setting up a strawman diverts attention from the real issue


Metanoia: the qualification of a statement to either diminish or strengthen its tone, as in “She was disturbed — make that appalled — by the spectacle.” Traditionally, nay is often a keyword that sets up the shift, but no replaces it in modern usage except in facetious or whimsical writing. “You are the fairest flower in the garden — nay, in the entire meadow.”


Narrative: a mode of expression, its intention being to tell a story


Paradox: the expression of seemingly contrary ideas that have an underlying truth or coexistence


Parody: the close imitation of style, usually exaggerating the features of the model for comedic effect


Pedantic: overly scholarly, academic, or bookish (connotation usually negative)


Point of view: the perspective from which the text is expressed
first person—the voice is a part of the action, usually “I, me, my, mine” pronouns
second person–referring to the audience, often with the pronouns “you, your, yours”
third person—written / spoken from an outside perspective (he, she, it, they)


Polemic (polemical): one who argues with hostility and generally does not concede opposing opinions have merit


Pun: a humorous play on the multiple meanings of a word or words: “You can tune a fiddle, but you can’t tuna fish—unless you’re a bass player.”


Refutation: working to prove an argument false


Rhetoric: the art of effective or persuasive communication


Rhetorical appeals: techniques used to persuade an audience


Logos: logic, reasoning; rhetorical appeal pertaining to the content of the message


Pathos: a quality that arouses emotions (especially pity or sorrow); the rhetorical appeal concerned with how to reach an
audience emotionally


Ethos: rhetorical appeal in which the author/speaker establishes trustworthiness of the audience; credibility


Rhetorical Question: a question asked solely to produce an effect and not to elicit a reply, as in “What is so rare as a day in June?”


Satire: a work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of human behavior by portraying it in an extreme way, often through the use of humor, and generally intended to point out a flaw and affect a change


Sentential (or Conjunctive) Adverbs: these single words or brief phrases emphasize the thought they precede, interrupt, or — rarely — follow. Examples include however, naturally, no doubt, and of course — and, in informal writing, phrases such as “you see.”


Syllogism: a logical argument often expressed in this typical form; “All A is C; all B is A; therefore all B is C.”


Symbol: an object or action that is what it is and also takes special significance for literary or rhetorical effect


Theme: what an artistic work suggests about life


Thesis: the expression of the author’s point, meaning, or position


Tone: the author’s attitude


Transition: a word, phrase, or clause that links different ideas or paragraphs


Understatement: a statement that is restrained in ironic contrast to what might have been said


Wit: the use of language that surprises and delights; it may involve particularly perceptive, humorous, or ingenious thoughts expressed
through great verbal power

Alliteration: the repetition of sounds, usually initial consonants in neighboring words. “She sells sea shells by the sea shore.”


Anaphora: a repetition of a word or of words at the beginning of two or more successive clauses; “I came, I saw, I conquered.”


Antimetabole / Chiasmus: (AN-ti-mə-TAB-ə-lee) repetition of words in reverse order (ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country)


Antistrophe (Epistrophe): repetition of a word or phrase at the close of successive clauses; “You said he was late — true enough. You said he was not prepared — true enough. You said he did not defend his statements — true enough.” “I swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” “[T]his nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people [...]”


Antithesis: opposition, or contrast, of ideas or words in a parallel construction. “Many are called, but few are chosen,” “We shall support any friends, oppose any foe”


Asyndeton: absence of conjunctions. “We cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground.”


Inversion: the reversal of the normal order of words for rhetorical effect. “Shouts the politician.”


Loose sentence: opposite of a periodic sentence, a sentence type in which the most important idea is expressed first, with dependent grammatical units following often conveying informality and a more conversational feel. “He might consider paying the higher fees at a private university, if the teacher/student ratio is small, the teachers are highly qualified, and the job placement rate is high.” “You can pass all your classes with good study habits and good attendance.” “He decided to major in science, even though he really wanted to study art, philosophy, and religion.”


Parallelism: the framing of words, phrases, or clauses to provide structural similarity and symmetry


Periodic sentence: opposite of a loose sentence, a sentence in which critical meaning comes only at the end (at the period); in this sentence type, the important independent clause is preceded by dependent phrases or clauses (its effect is often more formal and adds emphasis and variety). (e.g. “In spite of heavy snow and cold temperatures, the game continued.” “With low taxes, beautiful views and a mild climate, this city is a great place to live.”)


Polysyndeton: an insertion of conjunctions before each word/phrase in a list. “My fellow students read and studied and wrote and passed. I laughed and played and talked and failed.”


Repetition: speaking or writing something again for rhetorical effect


Syntax: the way an author arranges words and phrases into sentences


Zeugma: a use of word(s) in a grammatically similar way that produce different meanings. “My teeth and ambition are bared—Be prepared!” “When you open a book, you open your mind.” “Now the trumpet summons us again—not as a call to bear arms, though arms we need; not as a call to battle, though embattled we are—but a call to bear the burden of a long twilight struggle...”