Ap lang jeopardy
-
Upload
wendy-scruggs -
Category
Education
-
view
679 -
download
1
description
Transcript of Ap lang jeopardy
400
300 300300300 300
FINAL400
500500500
400400
500
100 100 100 100
500
400
300
100
500
Terms 1 Terms 3Terms 2
Final
200200 200 200 200 200
100
Terms 4 Terms 5 Terms 6
Pertaining to the value of art for its own sake or for form.
Answer
Aesthetic
Use of historically inaccurate details in a text.
Answer
Anachronism
Repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the next clause. Answer
Anadoplosis
The regular repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases or clauses.
Answer
Anaphora
The use of opposing or contrasting ideas in parallel grammatical forms of parts of speech.
Answer
Antithesis
A concise statement designed to make a point or illustrate a commonly held belief.
Answer
Aphorism
The practice of omitting conjunctions between words, phrases, or clauses.
Answer
Asyndeton
A novel or story whose theme is the moral or psychological growth of the main character.
Answer
Bildungsroman
The works of an author that have been accepted as authentic.
Answer
Canon
Seize the day.
Answer
Carpe Diem
Purification or cleansing of the spirit through the emotions of pity and terror as a witness to a tragedy.
Answer
Catharsis
Figure of speech by which the order of the terms in the first of parallel causes is reversed in the second.
Answer
Chiasmus
Informal speech or writing, such as local or regional saying.
Answer
Colloquial
The repetition of two or more consonants with a change in the intervening vowels, such as pitter-patter, splish-splash, and click-clack.
Answer
Consonance
Process of reasoning in which a conclusion is determined from a set of given evidence.
Answer
Deductive
The dictionary definition of a word; the direct and specific meaning.
Answer
Denotation
The use of an artificial device or contrived solution to solve a difficult situation.
Answer
Deus ex machina
Intended for teaching or to teach a moral lesson.
Answer
Didactic
A format discussion of a subject.
Answer
Discourse
Ghostly counterpart of a living person or an alter ego.
Answer
Doppelganger
An imaginary place where people live dehumanized, often fearful lives.
Answer
Dystopia
A poem or prose lamenting the death of a particular person.
Answer
Elegy
A quote set at the beginning of a literary work or at its divisions to set the tone or suggest a theme.
Answer
Epigraph
A piece of literature contained in or carried on by letters.
Answer
Epistolary
The repetition of a word or words at the end of two or more successive verses, clauses, or sentences.
Answer
Epistrophe
A piece of writing in praise of a deceased person.
Answer
Epitaph
The moral element that determines a character’s actions, rather than thought or emotion.
Answer
Ethos
The substitution of a milder or less direct expression for one that is harsh or blunt.
Answer
Euphemism
A single word or short phrase intended to emphasize surrounding words.
Answer
Expletive
An argument that isn’t valid.
Answer
Fallacy
A person or thing that makes another seem better by contrast.
Answer
Foil
Aristotle’s term for the main character’s tragic
flaw or error in judgment.
Answer
Hamartia
A sentence or word that relays
a command.
Answer
Imperative
Refers to opening a story in the middle of the
action.
Answer
In Media Res
The use of angry and insulting language in satirical writing.
Answer
Invective
Placing of two items side by side to create a certain effect, reveal an attitude, or accomplish some other purpose.
Answer
Juxtaposition
The logical information Presented.
Answer
Logos
Monitoring your own thoughts as you encounter ideas and facts presented to you in written form.
Answer
Metacognition
Desire to return in thought or fact to a former time.
Answer
Nostalgia
A statement that seems contradictory but is actually true.
Answer
Paradox
The audience's anticipated emotional reaction
Answer
Pathos