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Literature Test Review

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  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. I'm glad I know sign language; it's pretty handy.
    Pun
  • A central character that experiences conflict and changes and grows through the story.
    Round Character
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. John felt a cold chill run down his neck as he entered the dark alley alone.
    Foreshadowing
  • This point of view is rarely used. The narrator uses "you" like in a recipe
    Second Person
  • ______ ______ happens when someone says something other than what they mean.
    Verbal Irony
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. When John stepped onto the field a year later, he could still see his teammate run across the plate to win the championship game.
    Flashback
  • The narrator tells you what a single chracter is thinking or feeling. They use the pronouns he, she, and they.
    Third Person Limited
  • The time and place in which a story takes place.
    Setting
  • The class of literature comprising works of narrative prose based upon facts and reality. Fiction or Nonfiction
    Nonfiction
  • This point of view is when the narrator is a character in the story. They use pronouns I, me, my, we, etc.
    First Person
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. If you think you can win, you can win.
    Repetition
  • The way the author presents the chatracter to the audience.
    Characterization
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. The table danced across the room during the earthquake.
    Personification
  • What type of conflict would represent a fight between two people?
    Man vs Man
  • What type of conflict would represent a tornado tearing down a house?
    Man vs Nature
  • Teaches a lesson from the story.
    Theme
  • The author reveals a character's attributes through his/her actions dialogue, and interactions with others.
    Indirect Characterization
  • A character that stays the same throughout the story.
    Static Character
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. If you can't do the time, don't do the crime.
    Rhyme
  • Foreshadowing is one literary technique that authors use to build ____________.
    Suspense
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. The test was a breeze.
    Metaphor
  • The feeling that a narrative evokes in the reader.
    Mood
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. Mark liked to trick Chuck.
    Consonance
  • What type of conflict would represent a fear of heights?
    Man vs Self
  • What type of conflict would represent a person running a stop sign?
    Man vs Society
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. Busy as a bee.
    Simile
  • The class of literature comprising works of imaginative narration, especially in prose form. Fiction or Nonfiction
    Fiction
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. My boyfriend is in the doghouse.
    Idiom
  • The narrator knows everything about every character. They use the pronouns he, she, and they.
    Third Person Omniscient
  • A conclusion or judge from premises or evidence.
    Inference
  • A character that does not experience conflicts and does not grow or change through the story.
    Flat Character
  • The problem within the story.
    Conflict
  • The ____ _____ _____ is the perspective from which the story is told.
    Point of View
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. I have tons of money saved up in the bank.
    Hyperbole
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. The car whooshed past me in a blur.
    Onomatopoeia
  • The narrator tells a story without describing any chracters's thoughts, opinions, or feelings.
    Third Person Objective
  • The author reveals a character's attributes by stating them directly.
    Direct Characterization
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. Tim took tons of tools to make toys.
    Alliteration
  • ______ ______ happens when the audience knows something that the characters do not know.
    Dramatic Irony
  • _______ _______ happens when what actually happens is the opposite of what is expected or appropriate.
    Situaltional Irony
  • A character that changes throughout the story.
    Dynamic Character
  • Label each example with the correct figurative language. The bright sun warmed the soft, green grass as the clouds drifted through the baby blue sky.
    Imagery
  • What is the author's purpose? Hint (PIE)
    persuade, inform, entertain
  • The events that make up a story.
    Plot