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Literary Terms "Hamlet"
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Published on Dec 04, 2015
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
1.
LITERARY TERMS
HAMLET
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hartlandmartin
2.
CHARACTERIZATION
A way to highlight and explain the details about a character in a story
The patient boy and quiet girl were both well mannered and did not disobey their mother.
She gently knelt down and stretched out her hand to help her friend return to her feet after her friend fell on the ground.
The old lady twisted her fingers in her hands and bit her lip as she waited for her first grandchild to be born.
3.
MOOD
An element that evokes certain feelings or vibes in readers through words and descriptions.
Life is full of misery, loneliness, and suffering and it's over way too soon.
What a nice day!
My sister was very excited and hopeful to finally have a chance to meet her favorite actor.
4.
TONE
The perspective or attitude that the author adapts with regards to a specific character, place, or description.
He has a commanding presence and an authoritative voice.
The painting was bold, brash, and modern.
The riots ended in the violent deaths of three teenagers.
5.
CONFLICT
A serious disagreement or argument, typically a protracted one.
The neighbors fought because one wanted trees in the back yard and the other didn't.
He had a dispute with his wife over buying a new car.
My mother screamed at me for skipping school yesterday.
6.
CANNOTATION
An idea or feeling that a word invokes in addition to its literal or primary meaning.
Every morning my neighbor takes his mutt to the park.
You need to be pushy when looking for a job.
In the real world, procrastination can have a bad cannotation.
7.
SOLILOQUY
An act of speaking one's thoughts aloud when by oneself or regardless of any hearers.
The soliloquy at the end showed a man still puzzled by his continuing inability to ever see anything more than the facts.
The opening soliloquy which appears below establishes the character at the outset of the play.
The politician spoke at the college campus, expressing his thoughts in a long-winded soliloquy.
8.
ARCHETYPE
A very typical example of a certain person or thing.
As the great Mother pertains to nature, matter and Earth, the great Father archetype pertains to the ream of light and spirit.
We resolved to build a temple on Earth, as a sort of copy of its spiritual archetype.
He was the archetype of the individual man, the lone venturer, who against the odds makes out.
9.
AUTHOR'S PURPOSE
The reason an author decides to write about a specific topic.
To persuade
To inform
To entertain
10.
THEME
The subject of a talk, a piece of writing, a person's thoughts, or an exhibition.
Fate and free will
Fear of failure
Good versus bad
11.
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
The characters of a play, novel, or narrative.
Hamlet
Roderick Usher
Madeline Usher
12.
PERSONIFICATION
A personal nature or human characteristic to something nonhuman.
The stars danced playfully in the moonlit sky.
The first rays of morning tiptoed through the meadow.
The flowers waltzed in the gentle breeze.
13.
PROSE
Written or spoken language in its ordinary form, without metrical structure.
The cheetah is the fastest land animal
Tomorrow we have a sixty percent chance of snow with a high temperature around 34 degrees.
Call me Ishmael. - Moby Dick
14.
ANTAGONIST
A person who actively opposes or is hostile to someone or something.
Darth Vader
Lord Farquaad from Shrek
P. Sherman or The Dentist from Finding Nemo
15.
PROTAGONIST
The leading character or one of the major characters in a drama, movie, novel, or other fiction text.
Marlin and Nemo from Finding Nemo
Katniss from The Hunger Games
Jack Dawson from Titanic
16.
TRAGEDY
An event causing a great suffering, destruction, and distress.
A serious accident
A crime
A natural catastrophe
17.
TRAGIC FLAW
A trait in a character leading to his downfall and the character is often the hero of the literary piece.
Hamlet and Captain Ahab
The Tortoise and The Hare
Romeo's impulsive behavior
18.
APOSTROPHE
A punctuation mark used to indicate either possession or the omission of letters or numbers.
My neighbor's house.
She's my best friend.
The boy's teeth were very white.
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arripay
19.
FOIL
Prevent from succeeding.
Hamlet
Harry Potter
Divergent
20.
MONOLOGUE
A long speech by one actor in a play or movie
The speech in Hamlet
The speech in Jaws
The speech in Charlie Brown
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Darron Birgenheier
21.
ASIDE
A remark or passage by a character in a play that isn't intended to be heard by other characters.
When Juliet speaks to herself in Romeo and Juliet
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samudrakajal
22.
METAPHOR
A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action
The curtain of night
All the worlds a stage
She is fishing in troubled waters
23.
ALLUSION
An expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly.
I was surprised his nose didn't grow like Pinocchio's
He was a real Romeo with the ladies
This place is like a Garden of Eden
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akial
24.
PUN
A joke exploiting the different possible meanings of a word
I had abank account in the North Pole, but they froze all of my assets.
A good pun is its own reword.
A horse is a very stable animal.
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cavale
25.
IRNOY
The expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite.
A traffic cop gets his licenses suspended for unpaid parking tickets.
A no smoking sign on your cigarette break.
A traffic jam when you're already late.
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Saimz Eyez
26.
IAMBIC PENTAMETER
A certain kind of line of poetry that has to do with the number of shllables in the line and the emohasis placed on thise syllables.
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miss.libertine
Kaley Bailey
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