eifueo/docs/eng3uz.md

106 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

# Grade 11 HL English
The course code for this page is **ENG3UZ**.
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
## Literary Techniques/Devices
### Description
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
- Allusion: A brief and indirect reference to a thing or idea of significance.
- e.g., *"Look at Einstein over there, thinking he's so smart."*
- Anecdote: A short and interesting story or event used to support a point.
- e.g., *"You should all be grateful! When I was a young lad, we didn't have these fancy phones! We had to *talk* to people's *faces!"
- Hyperbole: An exaggeration for the purpose of emphasis.
- e.g., *"If you null pointer me one more time I am going to crush you into two billion pieces!"*
- Imagery: The usage of figurative language to describe concepts in a way that invokes the **senses**.
- e.g., *"My mother…how sweet and juicy her tender limbs are."*
- Metaphor: An implicit comparison between two unlike things without the use of "like" or "as".
- e.g., *"My computer is an absolute potato."*
- Simile: An explicit comparison between two unlike things *with* the use of "like" or "as".
- e.g., *"She's as stupid as an elephant!"*
- Litotes: An understatement by negating a positive or negative expression.
- e.g., *"My marks aren't the best in the world."*
- Personification: The application of human concepts to non-humans, such as human-like speech. This is a common example of a metaphor.
- e.g., *The rock blinked at me with a cute face unlike any other I had seen before. "…Owo. Uwu?"*
- Adjectives and adverbs: Words that describe and modify nouns and verbs, respectively.
- e.g., *The traitorous man died painfully.*
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
### Sound
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
- Alliteration: A number of words with the same beginning consonant sound that appear close together in sequence.
- e.g., *The dancing damsel dazzled the crowd.*
- Assonance: A repetition of similar vowel sounds in words close to each other in a sentence.
- e.g., *"Oh, please let her go."*
- Dialect: A regional variety of language with spelling, grammar, and pronunciation that differentiates a population from others around them.
- e.g., *"There's five of them dirty ducks flappin' out and about, sir!"*
- Euphony: The use of words and phrases that are pleasing to the ear by using long vowel sounds, harmonious constants (l, m, n, r, f, v), and soft consonants or semi-vowels (w, s, y, th, wh).
- e.g., *"The velvet…it's so lovely, and so very soft…"*
- Onomatopoeia: A word which imitates a sound effect.
- e.g., *The cat meowed as he looked on with adoring eyes that tore through my squealing heart.*
- Pun: A play on words that involve words with similar sounds but different meanings.
- e.g., *"Lettuce finish our salads."*
- Repetition: Using a phrase for emphasis multiple times within close proximity.
- e.g., *"I was too late. I was far too late. My dog…she tried her best."*
- Rhyme: A repetition of words whose end syllables sound similar.
- e.g., *Roses are red / Violets are blue / Your family is dead / And you will be too*
- Rhyme scheme: The rhyming pattern or structure at the end of each line of poetry.
- e.g., the above poem uses ABAB as its rhyme scheme.
- Rhythm: The usage of stressed and unstressed syllables to demonstrate patterns, especially in verses.
- Anapest: Three syllables, in which the first two are unstressed while the last is stressed.
- e.g., *"'Twas the* ***night*** *before* ***Christ****mas and* ***all*** *through the* ***house****"*
- Dactyl: Three syllables, in which the first is stressed while the rest are unstressed.
- e.g., *"Marvelous!"*
- Iamb: Two syllables, in which the first is unstressed while the second is stressed.
- e.g., *"You* ***stu****pid* ***id****iot."*
- Spondee: Two syllables, both of which are stressed.
- e.g., *"Rage, rage against the dying of the light"* (Dylan Thomas)
- Trochee: Two syllables, in which the first is stressed while the second is unstressed.
- e.g., *Double, double, toil and trouble* (William Shakespeare)
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
### Organisation and Pace
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
- Blank verse:
- Enjambment:
- Caesura:
- Form:
- Ballad:
- Concrete poem:
- Couplet:
- Dirge:
- Dramatic monologue:
- Lyric:
- Ode:
- Quatrain:
- Sonnet:
- Free verse:
- Genre:
- Line:
- Meter:
- Stanza:
- Sentence types:
- Sentence lengths:
- Syntax:
- Dialogue vs. narrative:
### Meaning
2020-09-16 14:59:19 -04:00
- Abstract language:
- Allegory:
- Ambiguity:
- Colloquialism:
- Concrete language:
- Connotation:
- Contrast/Juxtaposition:
- Denotation:
- Diction:
- Epigram:
- Irony:
- Jargon:
- Motif:
- Oxymoron:
- Paradox:
- Pathetic fallacy:
- Symbol:
- Tone:
- Theme: