Literary Terms:

1.  Allegory - 
a piece of literature that has a hidden meaning beneath the real or literal meaning.  i.e. story where characters name is Kindness or Patience.

2.  Alliteration -
repetition of initial consonant sounds. i.e. Fast Freddy.

3.  Anology -
a comparison of two things, alike in certain respects. i.e. sprots to life.

4.  Antagonist -
the character or force against which the protagonist is pitted.  i.e. the traditional bad guy.

5.  Character -
the people and sometimes the animals who participate in a literary work. can be major or minor.

6.  Characterization -
methods used by an author to make characters come alive.

7.  Climax -
turning point in the action when interest and intensity are peaked.  Where the reader knows how the story is going to end.

8.  Conflict -
the struggle between opposing forces. There are five types:
    a.  Man vs. Man
    b. Man vs. Nature
    c. Man vs. Society
    d. Man vs. Himself
    e. Man vs. Supernatural (the unknown or evil)

9.  Cliche -
a worn out expression.

10. Comedy -
a story that ends happily or with humor.

11. Dialogue -
written conversation between tow or more characters.

12.  Fiction -
  stories created by the author; fantasy, not real.

13. Flashback -
an interruption from a point in a story to an episode that hapened at an earlier time.

14. Foreshadowing -
the writer's use of hints or clues to indicate events that will occur later in the story.

15. Genre - kind, category, type of literature; i.e. fantasy, science fiction, sports, adventure, biography, etc.

16. Hyperbole -
a great big exaggeration.  used for emphasis. i.e. "raining cats and dogs"

17. Imagery -
descriptive words and phrases that re-create vivid sensory experiences; creates word stories.

18. Idiom -
a phrase that does not match the ordinary dictionary meaning. i.e. "he flew the coop."

19. Inference -
drawing a reasonable conclusion from a limited amount of information.

20. Irony -
saying one thing but meaning another.  A contrast between appearance and reality.  Sarcasm.

21. Mood -
the atmosphere or feeling that the writer creates for the reader.

22. Motivation -
why characters do what they do as a result of their characteristics and position in which they find themselves.

23. Narrator -
the one telling the story.  There are three types:
    a.  First person
    b.  Third person
    c.  Third person omnicient

24. Nonfiction -
prose writing that is about real people, places, events.  Factual stories.  Real.

25. Plot -
A plan of action for a story.  What happens in a story. There are four elements:
    a.  introduction
    b.  rising action
    c.  climax
    d.  denoument (falling action or whatever happens after the climax)

26. Protagonist -
the central or main character.  The good guy.

27. Structure -
The way the story, play is arranged.  Most often chronological arrangement: A,B,C,D.  Flashback is arrangement D,A,B,C.

28.  Suspense -
the element that keeps the reader wanting to know what happens next.  Suspense can be created through use of mystery, conflict, or characterization.

29. Theme -
Idea bout life expressed in literary work.  It is a comment on life, not a moral or rule to live by.  It may be stated directly, but most often, it is implied.  Not all stories have themes.

30. Tone -
author's attitude about his subject.  It is revealed by choice of words, details, descriptions of characters and events.