Literary Terms



Literary Terms with Examples

Pre-AP English Grades 6-12

Allegory—An allegory is a literary work that has an underlying meaning beneath the literal meaning. Allegory

relies heavily on symbolism to teach a lesson or illustrate an idea. Characters often represent

abstract concepts such as truth, good, or evil.

• Pilgrim’s Progress is an allegory in which Vanity Fair represents the world, and the Celestial City symbolizes Heaven.

Alliteration—Alliteration is the repetition of beginning consonant sound in a line of poetry.

• Let us go forth to lead the land we love. J.F. Kennedy, Inaugural

Allusion—An allusion makes reference to a historical or literary person, place, or event with which the reader

is assumed to be familiar. Many works of prose and poetry contain allusions to the Bible or to

classical mythology.

• Allusions can be historical, (like referring to Hitler), literary (like referring to Kurtz in

Heart of Darkness), religious (like referring to Noah and the flood), or mythical (like

referring to Atlas).

Ambiguity—a term describing those words, figures of speech, and also actions in literary works for which

more than one meaning is possible. It may result from the subtlety of an author’s art, or it may

stem from his confusion. It is the source of multiple interpretations: that is, different people can

interpret the same words and events in opposite ways because of the suggestive power of the

story or the poem.

• William Empson’s analysis of a line from Shakespeare’s Sonnet 73—In the poem the speaker compares his advancing age to a tree in early winter and the bough of that tree to “Bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds sang.”

Analogy---makes a comparison between two or more things that are similar in some ways but otherwise

unlike.

Anaphora—the regular repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases or

clauses.

• We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France, we shall fight on

the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we

shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight

in the hills. We shall never surrender. Churchill

Anecdote---is a brief story about an interesting, amusing, or strange event. Writers tell anecdotes to entertain

or to make a point.

• Evelyn Waugh’s essay “People Who Want to Sue Me” contains an anecdote about a young lady who mistakenly thought she knew who the characters in his book were.

Antagonist—The antagonist (bad guy) is the character who is placed in opposition to the protagonist (good

guy). He is a rival or enemy of the protagonist.

• The antagonist in Tolsoy’s “The Long Exile” is Makar Semyonof.

Anastrophe—word order is reversed or rearranged.

• Milton’s Paradise Lost—from the beginning of Belial’s speech in the Council of Pandemonium is deliberately confused to suggest Belial’s speciousness:

I should be much for open war, O Peers,

As not behind in hate, if what was urged

Main reason to persuade immediate war

Did not dissuade me most, and seem to cast

Ominous conjecture on the whole success.

When he who most excels in fact of arms,

In what he counsels and in what excels

Mistrustful, grounds for his courage on dispair

And utter dissolution, as the scope

Of all his aim, after some dire revenge.

Antithesis—the juxtaposition of contrasting ideas.

• Francis Bacon’s apophthegm “Crafty men contemn studies; simple men admire them; and wise men use them.”

Aphorism—a self-evident or universally recognized truth written in a concise manner. Aphorisms are used to

make a point about a topic or issue. Aphorisms are also called maxims, axioms, morals, sayings,

or adages.

• from Pope’s An Essay on Criticism: We think our fathers fools, so wise we grow;

Our wiser sons, no doubt, will think us so.

Apostrophe—a figure of speech that directly addresses an absent or imaginary person or abstraction.

• For Brutus, as you know, was Caesar’s angel.

Judge, O you gods, how dearly Caesar loved him. Shakespeare, Julius Caesar

Apposition—the placing next to a noun another noun or phrase that explains it.

Archetype—An image, plot, character, or descriptive detail that occurs frequently in literature, myth, religion,

or folklore, and causes emotion in the reader because it awakens an image in unconscious

memory. The archetype is universally recognized, transcending cultures and time.

The symbols that exists in the collective unconscious of people that include symbols in art,

literature, myths, religion that reoccur over time and across cultures. All archetypes must be

primordial, universal, and recurring. There are three types of archetypes: situational, character,

and symbolic.

1—situational archetypes

a—the quest—this motif describes the search for someone or some talisman which when

found and brought back, will restore fertility to a waste land, the desolation of

which is mirrored by a leader’s illness and disability

b—the task—to save the kingdom, to win the fair lady, to identify himself so that he may

reassume his rightful position the hero must perform some nearly superhuman

deed or the function of the ultimate goal

c—the initiation—this usually take the form of an initiation into adult life. The adolescent

comes into his/her maturity with new awareness and problems along with

new hope for the community

d—the journey—the journey sends the hero in search for some truth or information necessary

to restore fertility to the kingdom. Usually the hero descends into a real or

psychological hell and is forced to discover the blackest truths, quite often

concerning his faults. Once the hero is at his lowest point, he must accept

personal responsibility to return to the world of the living. A second use of this

pattern is the depiction of a limited number of travelers on a sea voyage, bus

ride, or any other trip for the purpose of isolating them and using them as a

microcosm of society.

e—the fall—this archetype describes a descent from a higher to a lower state of being. The

experience involves a defilement and/or loss of innocence and bliss. The fall is

often accompanied by expulsion from a kind of paradise as penalty for

disobedience and moral transgression

f—death and rebirth—the most common of all situational archetypes, this motif grows out of

the parallel between the cycle of nature and the cycle of life. Thus,

morning and springtime represent rebirth, birth, and youth; evening and

winter suggest old age and death

g—nature vs. mechanistic world—nature is good while technology and society are often evil

h—battle between good and evil—obviously the battle between two primal forces. Mankind

shows eternal optimism in continual portrayal of good

triumphing over evil despite great odds

i—the unhealable wound—this wound is either physical or psychological and cannot be healed

fully. This wound also indicated a loss of innocence. These

wounds often drive the sufferer to desperate measures.

k—the ritual—the actual ceremonies the initiate experiences that will mark his rite of passage

into another state. The importance of the ritual rites cannot be over stressed as

they provide clear sign post for character’s role in society as well as our own

position in the world.

l—the magic weapon—this symbolizes the extraordinary quality of the hero because no one

else can wield the weapon or use it to its fullest potential. It is usually

given by a mentor figure.

m—paradise—is seen as a place of peace, light, and beauty, echoing the primordial perfection

of nature. It sometimes represents heaven itself and sometimes a stage on the

road toward it. It may be depicted as a garden or, in the Christian tradition, as

the New Jerusalem.

2—character archetypes—

a—the hero—Lord Reglan in the Hero: A Study in Tradition, Myth and Drama, contends that

this archetype is so well defined that the life of the protagonist can be clearly

divided into a series of well—marked adventured which strongly suggest

a ritualistic pattern. Reglan finds that traditionally the hero’s mother is a virgin,

the circumstances of his conception are unusual, and at birth some attempt is

made to kill him. He is, however, spirited away and reared by foster parents.

We know almost nothing of his childhood, but upon reaching manhood he

returns to his future kingdom. After a victory over the king or a wild beast, he

marries a princess, becomes a king, after which he meets a mysterious death,

often at the top of a hill. His body is not buried, but nevertheless, he has one of

more holy sepulchers

b—the young man from the provinces—this hero is spirited away as a young man and raised

by strangers. He later returns to his home and

heritage where he is a stranger who can see new

problems and solutions.

c—the initiates—these are young heroes or heroines, who prior to their quest, must endure

some training and ceremony.

d—mentors—these individuals serve as teachers or counselors to the initiates. Sometimes

they work as role models and often serve as a father or mother figure

e—mentor-pupil relationship—the mentor teaches by example the skills necessary to survive

the quest

f—father-son conflict—tension often results from separation during childhood or from an

external source when the individuals meet as men and where the

mentor often has a higher place in the affections of the hero than the

natural parent

g—hunting or group companions—loyal companions willing to face any number of perils in

order to be together

h—loyal retainers—these individuals are somewhat like servants who are heroic themselves.

Their duty is to protect the hero and reflect the nobility of the hero.

i—friendly beast—this shows that nature is on the side of the hero

k—the devil figure—evil incarnate, this character offers worldly goods, fame, or knowledge to

the protagonist in exchange for possession of the soul

l—the evil figure with the ultimately good heart—a redeemable devil figure saved by the

nobility or love of the hero

m—the scapegoat—an animal or more usually a human whose death in a public ceremony

expiates some taint or sin that has been visited upon a community. Their

death often mistakes them a more powerful force in society than when

they lived.

n—the outcast—a figure who is banished from a social group for some crime (real or imagined)

against his fellow man. The outcast is usually destined to become a wanderer

from place to place.

o—the woman figure—

1—the earthmother—symbolic of fruition, abundance, and fertility. This character

traditionally offers spiritual and emotional nourishment to

those with whom she comes in contact. Often depicted in earth

colors and has large breasts and hips symbolic of her

childbearing capabilities

2—the temptress—characterized by sensuous beauty, this woman is one to who the

protagonist is physically attracted and who ultimately brings

about his downfall

3—the platonic ideal—this woman is a source of inspiration and a spiritual ideal, for

whom the protagonist or author has an intellectual rather than a

physical attraction

4—the unfaithful wife—a woman married to a man she sees as dull or distant and is

attracted to more virile or interesting men

5—the damsel in distress—the vulnerable woman who must be rescued by the hero.

She often is used as a trap to ensnare the unsuspecting

hero

6—the star-crossed lovers—these two characters are engaged in a love affair that is

fated to end tragically for one or both due to the

disapproval of the society, friends, or family or some

tragic situation

p—the creature of nightmare—a monster usually summoned from the deepest, darkest part of

the human psyche to threaten the lives of the hero/heroine.

Often it is a perversion or desecration of the human body

3—symbolic archetypes—

a—light vs. dark—light usually suggests hope, renewal, or intellectual illumination; dark implies

the unknown, ignorance, or despair

b—water vs. desert—because water is necessary to life and growth, it commonly appears as a

birth or rebirth symbol. Water is used in baptismal services, which

solemnizes spiritual births. Similarly, the appearance of rain in a work of

literature can suggest a character’s spiritual rebirth.

c—heaven vs. hell—Man has traditionally associated parts of the universe not accessible to

him with the dwelling places of the primordial forces that govern his

world. The skies and mountain tops house the gods; the bowels of the

earth contain diabolic forces that inhabit this universe

d—innate wisdom vs. educated stupidity—some characters exhibit wisdom and

understanding of situations instinctively as

opposed to those supposedly in charge. Loyal

retainers often exhibit this wisdom as they

accompany them on the journey.

e—haven vs. wilderness—places of safety contrast sharply against the dangerous wilderness.

Heroes are often sheltered for a time to regain health and

resources

f—supernatural intervention—the gods intervene on the side of the hero or sometimes

against him

g—fire vs. ice—fire represents knowledge, light, life, rebirth; while ice like desert represents

ignorance, darkness, sterility, and death

h—mandalas (India) and yantras (Tibet)—In Sanskrit, mandala means circle. Jung says that

one of the most powerful religious symbols is the

circle. He says that the circle is one of the most

powerful religious symbols is the circle. He says

that the circle is one of the greatest primordial

images of mankind and that, in considering the

symbol of the circle, we are analyzing the self.

The circle represents totality, everything within the

circle is one thing which is encircled, enframed.

But the temporal aspect of the circle is that you

leave, go somewhere, and always come back.

The circle suggests a complete totality, whether in

time or space.

i—mazes or labyrinth—inner journey through the confusing and conflicting pathways of the

mind until the seeker reaches the center and discovers the realities of

his/her own nature

Archetypal symbols—

Numbers—

three—the Trinity ( Father, Son, Holy Ghost); mind, body, spirit; birth, life, death

four—Mankind—four limbs; four elements; four seasons; the ages of man

six—devil; evil

seven—Divinity (3) + Mankind (4) = relationship between man and God. Seven deadly sins; seven

days of the week; seven days to create the world; seven stages of civilization; seven colors of

the rainbow; seven gifts of the Holy Spirit

Shapes—

oval—woman, passivity

triangle—communication between heaven and earth, fire, the number 3, trinity, aspiration, movement

upward, return to origins, gas, light, sight

square—pluralism, earth, firmness, stability, construction, material, solidity, the number 4

rectangle—most rational, most secure

cross—tree of life, axis of the world, struggle, martyrdom, orientation in space

circle—heaven, intellect, thought, sun, unity, perfection, eternity, oneness, celestial realm, hearing,

sound

spiral—evolution of the universe, orbit, growth, deepening, cosmic motion, relationship between unity

and multiplicity, macrocosm, breath, spirit, water

Colors—

dark—matter, germ, before existence, chaos

light—spirit, mortality, all, creative force, the direction East, spiritual thought

red—sunrise, birth, blood, fire, emotion, wounds, death, passion, sentiment, mother, anger, excitement,

heat, physical stimulation

orange—fire, pride, ambition, egoism

green—earth, fertility, sensation, vegetation, death, water, nature, sympathy, adaptability, growth, envy

blue—clear sky, thinking, the day, the sea, height, depth, heaven, religious feeling, devotion,

innocence, truth, psychic ability, spirituality, physical soothing and cooling

violet—water, nostalgia, memory, advanced spirituality

gold—majesty, sun, wealth, corn (life dependency), truth

silver—moon, wealth

Nature—

air—activity, creativity, breath, light, freedom, liberty, movement

ascent—height, transcendence, inward journey, increasing intensity

center—thought, unity, timelessness, paradise, creator, infinity, neutralizing opposites

descent—unconscious, potentialities of being, animal nature

duality (ying/yang)—opposites, complements, positive-negative, male-female, life-death

earth—passive, feminine, receptive, solid

fire—ability to transform, love, life, health, control, spiritual energy, regeneration, sun, God, passion

image—highest form of knowing, thought as a form

lake—mystery, depth, unconsciousness

crescent moon—change, transition

moon—master of women, vegetation

mountain—height, mass, loftiness, center of the world, ambition, goals

valley—depression, low-points, evil, unknown

sun—hero, son of Heaven, knowledge, the Divine eye, fire, life force, creative guiding force, brightness,

splendor, active awakening, healing, resurrection, ultimate wholeness

unity—spirit, oneness, wholeness, transcendence, the source, harmony, revelation, active principle, a

point, a dot, supreme power, completeness in itself, the divinity

water—passive, feminine, change

rivers—life force, life cycle

streams—life force, life cycle

stars—guidance

wind—Holy Spirit, life, messenger

ice/snow—coldness

clouds—mystery, sacred

mist—mystery, sacred

rain—life giver

steam—transformation to the Holy Spirit

volcano—evil, shadow

lightening—intuition, inspiration

tree—where we learn, tree of life, tree of knowledge

forest—evil, lost, fear

Objects—

feathers—lightness, speed

shadow—our dark side, evil, devil, materiality

masks—concealment

boats/rafts—safe passage

bridge—change, transformation

right hand—rectitude

left hand—deviousness

feet—stability, freedom

skeleton—mortality, vanity

heart—love, emotions

hourglass—passage of time

father time—time swiftly passing; death

Gems—

pearl—royalty, power, passion, tears of joy or sorrow

emerald—fertility, faith, wisdom

jade—perfection, immortality

sapphire—Heaven

diamond—permanence, incorruptibility

Animals—

deer (stag)—wisdom

ox—power, strength

spider—web of life

pig—gluttony

griffin—guardian on path to salvation

cat—domesticity

tiger—ferocity, protectiveness

eagle—Sky God

lion—valor, royalty

cockerel—pride, courage

horse—speed, power, mobility

unicorn—female, purity

goat—devil

bear—bravery, strength

bull—power, stubbornness

toad—witchcraft

white elephant—patience, wisdom, long memory

lamb—sacrifice, innocence, purity

Birds—flight, ascension

feathers—speed, lightness

dove—peace, Holy Spirit

peacock—pride

pelican—self-sacrifice

raven—prophecy

bat—darkness, chaos

Aristotle’s Rules for Tragedy—the purpose of a tragedy is to arouse the emotions of pity and fear thus to

produce in the audience a catharsis of the emotions. An imitation of an

action that is complete, and whole, and of a certain magnitude

1--dramatic unities—the principles of dramatic structure involving actions,

time, and place; having a beginning, a middle, and an

end

2-- recognition—a plot in which the principal reversal or peripety results from

the acquisition by one of the characters of knowledge which

was previously withheld by the characters or the story and

now results in a decisive change of course for the character

3-- reversal—a change of fortune for the protagonist in a dramatic or fictional

plot

4-- hamartia—the character weakness or great error through which the

fortunes of the hero of a tragedy are reversed. This tragic flaw

may be caused by bad judgment, bad character, inherited

weakness, or any other possible causes of error that must be

expressed through a definite action or failure to perform such

an action

5-- catharsis—purgation of emotions

6-- hubris—is excessive pride, and it is often the downfall of literary

characters.

Audience—the person or group of people for whom the piece of writing is intended

Autobiography---is a form of nonfiction in which the writer tells the story of his or her own life. An

autobiography may tell about the person’s whole life or only a part of it.

Aside—a convention in drama whereby a character interrupts a conversation to address the audience and not

the person to whom he has been talking

• An example occurs in Act I, scene 4 of Macbeth:

King. My worthy Cawdor!

Macbeth. [Aside.] The prince of Cumberland!

That is a step

On which I must fall down, or else o’erleap,

Assonance—Similar vowel sound in stressed syllables that end with different consonant sounds.

• That hoard and sleep and feed, and know not me. Alfred, Lord Tennyson, “Ulysses”

Asyndeton—conjunctions are omitted, producing a fast-paced and rapid prose.

• We shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardships, support any friend,

oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty. J.F. Kennedy, Inaugural

Atmosphere—the mood or moods of a literary work created by the description of settings, by the actions and

words of characters, by the tone of an author or the voice through which he speaks.

• The description of weather in Robert Browning’s “Porphyria’s Lover” builds an atmosphere of suspense and foreboding.

Ballad—a narrative song that generally contains a simple but dramatic narrative for which little background is

given. The story and emotional force of the ballad are usually conveyed by dialogue;

understatement of the situation and repetition (refrain) contribute to the power of the ballad.

• Literary ballads are written in imitation of folk ballads and have a known author, as opposed to the anonymous folk ballad. Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is an example of a literary ballad.

Biography---a form of nonfiction in which a writer tell the life story of another person. Most biographies are

written about famous or admirable people. Although biographies are nonfiction, the most

effective ones share the qualities of good narrative writing.

Blank verse—unrhymed iambic pentameter that is frequently used in poetry and also in poetic drama, perhaps

because it is more natural and closer to speech than most metrical lines. It is open to subtle

variations by means of a shift in the pauses within lines, or of run-on lines, or of slight

alterations of the iambic pattern.

• Friar: Be pa’ / tient, for’ / the world’ / is broad’ / and wide’. Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

Caesura—the main internal pause of a line of poetry. The pause can be dictated by punctuation, grammar,

natural stops in speech, or rhetorical emphasis in oral delivery.

• For example, the following line from John Donne’s “Death Be Not Proud” has a caesura:

One short sleep past, // we wake eternally.

Caricature—an unsubtle, oversimplified, and exaggerated presentation of a character, generally stressing only

one aspect, so that the reader understands what the character represents. It is designed to

make a person or a type of person seen ridiculous.

• Shakespeare Henry IV and The Merry Wives of Windsor—the character of Falstaff

Character---is a person or an animal that takes part in the action of a literary work. A main or major character

is the most important character in a story, poem, or play. A minor character plays a lesser role

but is necessary for the story to develop.

1—round character---a fully developed character in whom many traits are exhibited

• Walter Mitty in James Thurber’s “the Secret Life of Walter Mitty”

2—flat character—a one-sided or stereotypical character

• Montresor, the vengeful murderer, in Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado”

3—static character—a character who does not undergo a change

• the king in Frank R. Stockton’s “The Lady, or the Tiger?”

4—dynamic character---a character who changes or grows in some way during the course of a

piece

• Sarah in Joanne Greenberg’s “And Sarah Laughed”

5--stock character—a stereotype, character types that occur repeatedly in written and visual

stories and are easily recognizable by readers and viewers.

Characterization—the process by which author’s create memorable characters. Authors use two major

methods of characterization—direct and indirect.

1—direct characterization—an author tells what the character is like—looks and actions

• “He was a tall, rawboned man with a bullet-shaped head, and he looked exactly ike what he was—a deacon in a church.” “Before the End of Summer,” Grant Moss Jr.

2—indirect characterization—a writer reveals a character’s personality through his or her own

appearance, words, actions, and effects on others. Sometimes

the writer describes what other participants in the story say and

think about the character. The reader draws his/her own

conclusions about the character being analyzed.

Chiasmus—derived from the Greek letter CHI (X); grammatical structure of the first clause or phrase is

reversed in the second, sometimes repeating the same word.

• The Vanity of Human Wishes—“By the day the frolic, and the dance by night.”

• Essay on Man—“His time a moment, and a point his space.”

Climax—The point of highest interest: the point at which the reader makes the greatest emotional response. It

is also used to designate the turning point in the action—the place at which the rising action

reverses and becomes falling action.

• In Amy Tan’s “Rules of the Game,” the climax falls toward the end of the story when Meimei and her mother exchange harsh words and then Meimei runs away.

Colloquial—the use of slang or informalities in speech and writing

• The man, a dodgy customer with a shifty look in his eye, was clearly up to no good.

Comedy—a form of drama that generally entertains and induces varying degrees of laughter, although at

times it can comment searchingly on human nature and society.

• Gore Vidal’s “Visit to a Small Planet” is a comedy.

Comic relief—momentary release from the build-up of tragic tension in a narrative, usually a drama, though

the use of comic scenes

• ACT IV, scene 4. Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

Conceit—a fanciful expression usually in the form of an extended metaphor or surprising analogy between

dissimilar objects; types of conceits include conceit of oxymoron, jealousy conceit, inventory of

blazon conceit, carpe diem conceit, traditional conceit of the idealizers, conceit of the pastoral

hyperbole, heraldic conceit, etymological conceit, concetti predicabili, Clevelandism conceit, and the

metaphysical conceit.

• Jealousy Conceit—Romeo and Juliet, II, I

See! How she leans her cheek upon her hand:

O! that I were a glove upon that hand,

That I might touch that cheek.

Concrete Poem—a poem with a shape that suggests it subject. The poet arranges the letters, punctuation,

and lines to create an image, or picture, on the page.

Conflict—The struggle which grows out of the interplay of the two opposing forces in a plot. At least one of

the opposing forces is usually a person. This person, usually the protagonist, may be involved in

conflicts of four different kinds:

1—against the forces of nature

2—against another person, usually the antagonist

3—against society as a force

4—against opposing elements within the person

5—against Fate or Destiny

• In Homer’s Odyssey, Odysseus’s conflicts with Polyphemus, Scylla and Charybdis, and the suitors are all external.

• In W.D. Wetherell’s “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant,” the narrator is torn between reeling in a fish (and losing the potential affections of Sheila) and letting it go (and losing the catch of a lifetime), causing an internal conflict.

Connotation—the implications, inferences, or suggestive power of words, phrases, or figures of speech

• The word din suggests noise that does not let up, to the point of being maddening or

deafening. Elie Wiesel, from NIGHT

Consonance—The use at the end of verses of words in which the final consonant in the stressed syllable

agree but the vowels that precede them differ.

• … like a pair of thick socks... Jimmy Santiago Baca, “I Am Offering This Poem”

Content—the basic meanings, emotions, actions, or attitudes in a literary work which an author shapes

through techniques

Context—the surroundings in which an element of a literary work appears. The study of the relationships of

that element to other details or actions in the verbal environments is basic to literary analysis

Contrast—the juxtaposition of opposites—details, concepts, or people.

Convention—in literary works traditional practices, involving both technique and content, which accumulate as

a literary type develops. In literary analysis a knowledge of conventions can help you recognize

how an author develops meaning within a given work. It also allows you to determine whether

an author is deviating from the traditions. Your knowledge of conventions should be put in the

context of the specific work being studied. The study of convention in regard to content may

also enter into characterization and plot situations. The old-fashioned melodrama the villain

who pursues and torments the heroine is a conventional people figure.

• Dr. Johnson—Preface to Shakespeare—Delusion, if delusion be admitted, has no certain limitation; if the spectator can be once persuaded, that his old acquaintance are Alexander and Caesar, that a room illuminated with candles is the plain of Pharsalia, or the bank of Granicus, he is in a state of elevation about the reach of reason, or of truth, and from the heights of empyrean poetry, may despise the circumscriptions of terrestrial nature. There is no reason why a mind thus wandering in exstasy should count the clock, or why an hour should not be a century in that calenture of the brains that can make the stage a field. The truth is, that the spectators are always in their senses, and know, from the first act to the last, that the stage is only a stage, and that the players are only players.

Couplet—a pair of lines in poetry ending with the same rhyme

• For thy sweet love remembered such wealth brings

That then I scorn to change my state with kings. Shakespeare, “Sonnet 29”

Denotation—the exact or dictionary meaning of a word without its emotional or suggestive associations

• The denotation of the word politician is one who is professionally engaged in politics.

Description—a portrait, in words, of a person, place, or object. Descriptive writing use images that appeal to

the five senses.

• The last graveyard flowers were blooming, and their smell drifted across the cotton field and

through every room of our house, speaking softly the names of our dead. James Hurst,

“The Scarlet Ibis”

Dialect—a form of language spoken by people in a particular region or group. Dialects differ in pronunciations,

grammar, and word choice. Writers use dialect to make their characters seem realistic.

• The following lines from “A Red, Red Rose” by Robert Burns make use of Scottish dialect:

Till a’ seas gang dry, my dear,

And the rocks melt wi’ the sun!

Dialogue—the conversation between people in poetry, plays, and stories. It is a basic source of the study of

characters and of an author’s style. Although important in all types of literature, dialogue is

perhaps most crucial in drama.

Diction—the choice and arrangement of words in phrases and images or in larger units such as poetic lines

and sentences. Poetic diction has been interpreted as the use of artificial and specialized language

for the purpose of distinguishing poetry from prose or ordinary speech.

Epic—a long narrative poem about the adventures of a hero whose action reflect the ideals and values of a

nation or group. Epics usually address universal concerns, such as good and evil, life and death, and

other serious subjects. There are basically two types of epics: 1) primary—also known as oral or

primitive, belonging to oral tradition thus being composed orally and recited and much later in some

cases written down; 2) secondary—also known as literary because it is written down from the

beginning.

• Examples of Primary (oral) Epics—The Epic of Gilgamesh, Illiad and Odyssey, and Beowulf

• Examples of Literary (written) Epics—Paradise Lost, Aeneid, and La Legende des siecles

Epiphany—a sudden understanding or realization

• In “A cup of Tea,” by Katherine Mansfield, Rosemary Fell’s realization that her husband finds Miss Smith pretty is an epiphany.

Essay—a short nonfiction work about a particular subject. Most essays have a single major focus and a clear

introduction, body, and conclusion.

1—narrative essay—tells a true story about real people

2—expository essay—presents information, discusses ideas, or explains a process

3—persuasive essay—presents and supports an opinion with strong arguments or reasons

4—descriptive essay—describes events and feelings by including images and details

5—reflective essay—communicates a writer’s thoughts about a topic of personal interest

Euphemism—more agreeable or less offensive substitute for unpleasant words or concepts

• Euphemism—A clean bomb exploded in the midst of the New England states and has a suspected connection to the war on terrorism.

• Reality—A nuclear bomb with minimal fall-out, which kills tens of thousands of people, as opposed to a regular nuclear bomb, which kills hundreds of thousands of people, exploded in the midst of the New England states and has a suspected connection to the war on terrorism.

Exposition—The exposition is the portion of the story which reveals important character background, setting,

and initial conflict information.

Fable—a brief story or poem, usually with animal characters, that teaches a lesson, or moral. The moral is

usually stated at the end of the fable. The fable is an ancient literary form found in many cultures. The

fables written by Aesop, a Greek slave who lived in the sixth century B.C., are still popular with

children today.

• Animal Farm is written in fable form.

Fantasy—a highly imaginative writing that contains elements not found in real life. Examples of fantasies

include stories that involve supernatural elements, stories that resemble fairy tales, stories that deal

with imaginary places and creatures, and science-fiction stories.

Fiction—a prose writing that tells about imaginary characters and events.

Figurative Language (figures of speech)—writing or speech that is not meant to be taken literally. The many

types of figurative language include metaphor, simile, and

personification.

• He ran like a hare down the street.

Figurative meaning—is the suggested by the connotations of words and by the images employed by an

author

Flashback—is a scene in a short story, novel, play, or narrative poem that interrupts the action to show an

event that happened earlier.

• In “And Sarah Laughed,” the author Joanne Greenberg uses flashback when she relates Sarah’s memory of the day she first discovered that her baby was unable to hear.

Folk Tale—a story composed orally and then passed from person to person by word of mouth. Most folk tales

are highly entertaining, with plots featuring heroes, adventure, magic, or romance.

Foil—a secondary character whose personality or actions serve as a commentary (frequently through contrast)

on a principal character.

• Mercutio is Romeo’s foil in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet.

Foot (or feet)—a measurement of accented and/or unaccented syllables. These fall into various patterns and

constitute the basis of meter in poetry

Foreshadowing—is the author’s use of clues to hint at what might happen next in the story. It is used to build

the reader’s sense of expectations or to create suspense.

• In Gerald Haslam’s “The Horned Toad,” the death of the toad and its burial in its natural environment foreshadow the death and burial of Grandma in the open country where she’d spent most of her life.

Free verse—poetry which breaks from metrical regularity or fixed patterns. Although the verse is free, it

generally creates its own internal rhythm. It usually rhyme and frequently unfolds in lengthy

lines.

• Walt Whitman “After the Sea-ship”

After the sea-ship, after the whistling winds,

After the white-grey sails taut to their spars and ropes,

Below, a myriad of waves hastening, lifting up their necks,

Tending in ceaseless flow toward the track of the ship,

Waves of the ocean bubbling and gurgling, blithely prying…

Genre—A term used in literary criticism to designate the distinct types of categories into which literary works

are grouped according to form or technique. The traditional genres include tragedy, comedy, epic,

and lyric. Today the division of literature into genres would also include novel, short story, essay,

television play, and motion picture scenario.

Haiku—a three-lined Japanese verse form. The first and third lines of a haiku each have five syllables. The

second line has seven syllables. A writer of haiku uses images to create a single vivid picture,

generally of a scene from nature.

• a clear sheet of sky

calligraphy of blackbirds

written and erased

Katy Peale

Homeric Simile—elaborated comparison that is more involved, more ornate, and is a conscious imitation of

the Homeric manner. The secondary object or picture that is developed into an independent

aesthetic object, an image which for the moment excludes the primary object with which it is

being compared

• …and I leaned on it

turning it as a shipwright turns a drill

in planking, having men below to swing

the two-handles strap that spins it in the groove. Homer, The Odyssey

Homily—a “sermon;” any serious talk, speech, or lecture involving moral or spiritual advice

Hyperbole—A figure of speech in which conscious exaggeration is used without the intent of literal

persuasion. It may be used to heighten effect, or it may be used to produce comic effect.

Exaggeration or overstatement of an idea, attitude, emotion, or detail in a literary work.

• “A hundred strong men strained beneath his coffin.” “The Funeral,” Gordon Parks

Idiom—an expression whose meaning is different from the sum of the meanings of its individual words.

• Burning the midnight oil means “staying up late ar night.”

Imagery—Words and phrases create vivid sensory experiences for the reader. Though sight imagery is most

common, imagery may appeal to any of the senses. Good writers often attempt to appeal to

several senses.

• Robert Lowell “Our Lady of Walsingham”

There once the penitents took off their shoes

And then waked barefoot the remaining mile;

And the small tress, a stream and hedgerows file

Slowly along the munching English lane,

Like cows to the old shrine, until you lose

Track of your dragging pain.

The stream flows down under the druid tree,

Shiloah’s whirlpools gurgle and make glad

The castle of God.

Invective—an emotionally violent, verbal denunciation or attack using strong, abusive language that

expresses dislike, disgust, contempt, and even hatred of a class or group of people, an institution,

a scene, or on life itself

• Jonathan Swift expresses dislike, contempt, and disgust of English nobility in Gulliver’s Travels, and “A Modest Proposal” attacked the issue of famine and its solutions with a satirical contempt.

Irony—the general name given to literary techniques that involve surprising, interesting, or amusing

contradictions.

1—verbal irony—words are used to suggest the opposite of their usual meanings.

2—dramatic irony—there is a contradiction between what a character thinks and what the

reader or audience knows to be true

3—situation irony—an event occurs that directly contradicts the expectations of the

characters, the reader, or the audience.

Juxtaposition—a poetic rhetorical device, which normally unassociated ideas, words, or phrases are placed

next to one another

Legend—a widely told story about the past, one that may or may not have a foundation in fact.

• Robin Hood is a legendary hero.

Limerick---a short, humorous poem of five lines. The first, second, and fifth lines rhyme, as do the third and

fourth. The lines that rhyme have the same rhythm.

• There was a young person of Mullion,

Intent upon marrying bullion;

By some horrible fluke

She jilted a duke

And had to elope with a scullion.

Literal Meaning—surface meaning of a literary work derived by an emphasis on denotation, summary, and

paraphrase.

Litotes—opposite of hyperbole; intensifies an idea by understatement.

• War is not healthy for children and other living things.

Lyric—a poem, generally short, presented by a single speaker, either the poet or some voice imaginatively

adopted by the poet, and expressing some basic emotions such as sorrow or love. The tone can vary

from light, frivolous compliment to a beloved one to a deeply felt yearning or sorrow. They are usually

constructed with a unity of a single mood, emotion, or thought.

• “The World Is Too Much with Us” and “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” by William Wordsworth are examples of lyric poetry.

Memoir—a form of autobiographical writing that deals with the writer’s memory of someone or of a significant

event. Often, memoirs are very personal.

• Night, by Elie Wiesel, is an example of a memoir.

Metaphor—a comparison between two unlike things.

• [love] is a pot full of yellow corn

to warm your belly in winter “I Am Offering This Poem,” Jimmy Santiago Baca

1--extended metaphor—a subject is spoken of, or written, as though it were something else.

However, an extended metaphor differs from a regular metaphor in that

several comparisons are made.

Meter—the lines of poetry, the arrangement of accented and unaccented syllables into various patterns. A

stressed syllable can be marked with a slash (/), and an unaccented syllable can be designated by a

dash (-). The combinations of these syllables are generally measured in feet.

Metonymy—designation of one thing with something closely related or associated with it

• Crown is a metonymy of king.

Monologue—a one sided conversation

• Shakespeare—Othello—The Moore, Othello, uses a monologue to come to self-realization.

Mood—Mood is the feeling or atmosphere that a writer creates for the reader. Connotative words, sensory

images, and figurative language contribute to the mood of a selection, as do the sound and rhythm of

the language.

Moral—a lesson taught by a literary work. A fable usually ends with a moral that is directly stated. A poem,

short story, novel, or essay often suggests a moral that is not directly stated. The reader must draw the

moral from other elements.

Motif—Motif is a simple element that serves as a basis for an expanded narrative. Less strictly, it is a

conventional situation, device, interest, or incident employed in folklore, fiction, or drama. The carrying

off of a mortal queen by a fairy lover is a motif about which full stories were built in medieval romance.

• Luck is a central motif of D.H. Lawrence’s “The Rocking-Horse Winner.”

Motivation—Motivations is the presentation of reasons and explanations for the actions of a character in any

work of fiction. It results from a combination of the character’s temperament and moral nature

with the circumstances in which a character is placed.

Myth—a motif or narrative recurring through human experience and religious history and dealing with gods

and heroes, with natural phenomena, or with basic hopes and fears of people derived from universal

experience and transformed into psychological or imaginative expression. A myth thus is a part of the

cultural and religious heritage of mankind. There are many sources of myth which literary artists have

used:

1—anthropology—primitive rites of initiation and trial

2—natural phenomena—water as purification, spring as rebirth

3—a given culture—cultural mythology and works like the Iliad and Oedipus the King

4—a given religion—or one aspect of it, for example, the Judas tree, the fall of Adam and Eve

5—psychology—for instance, the Oedipus complex as representative of man’s incestuous desire, or

archetypes, which are elements of human experiences residing permanently in the

collective unconscious of man, such as death and rebirth or the struggle between

generations.

Narration—is writing that tell a story.

Narrative Poem—a story told in verse. Narrative poems often have all the elements of short stories, including

characters, conflict, and plot.

• Examples—Beowulf, The Epic of Gilgamesh, Canterbury Tales, Paradise Lost, Rime of the Ancient Mariner, and Rape of the Lock

Narrator---a speaker or character who tells a story.

1—third-person narrator—one who stands outside the action and speaks about it

2—first-person narrator—one who tells a story and participates in its action

Nonfiction—prose writing that presents and explains ideas or that tells about real people, places, objects, or

events.

Novel—a long work of fiction. Novels contain such elements as characters, plot, conflict, and setting.

Ode—a long lyric poem, generally free in structure and usually serious in subject matter, what can be quite

varied. The style of an ode is dignified and rhetorical.

• Ben Johnson “Ode to Sir Lucius Cary and Sir H. Morison”

It is not growing a tree

In bulk, doth make man better be;

Or standing long an Oak, three hundred year,

To fall a log at last, dry, bald, and sear.

A Lily a day

Is fairer far, in May

Although it fall and die that night;

It was the plant and flower of light.

In small proportions we just beauties see;

And in short measure, life may be perfect.

Onomatopoeia—Onomatopoeia is the use of words which by their pronunciation suggest their meaning. The

words literally represent sound. The use of a word or words which imitate the sound they

stand for.

• Examples—buzz, hiss, dong, crackle, moo, pop, whiz, whoosh, zoom

Oral tradition—the passing of songs, stories, and poems from generation to generation by word of mouth.

Oxymoron—contradiction; two contradictory terms or ideas are used together

• Examples—sweet sorrow, jumbo shrimp, beginning expert, political honesty

Paradox—the linking of ideas or feelings which are seemingly contradictory but which actually express a basic

truth when they are put together and the implications are formulated. It is related to irony.

• I am and not, I freeze and yet am burned,

“On Monsieur’s Departure,” Elizabeth I

Parallelism—the balancing of equal parts of a sentence, the repetition of a sentence pattern, or the repetition

of words at the beginning of lines of poetry. When an author frequently stresses the equal parts

of sentences, the word balanced is used to describe his style. The use of parallelism contributes

to the musical quality of prose of poetry. Expressing similar or related ideas in similar

grammatical structures.

• Between the conception / and the creation /

Between the emotion / And the response /

Falls the Shadow “The Hollow Men,” T.S. Eliot

Parenthesis—the insertion of words, phrases, or a sentence that is not syntactically related to the rest of the

sentence. Such material is set off from the rest of the sentence in one of two ways, dashes or

parenthesis. Either is acceptable.

Parody—an imitation of a literary work that usually mock or burlesques the basic characteristics of the

original

• Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 130” is a parody of Renaissance love poetry.

Persona—the voice speaking in a literary work—sometimes the author, his image of himself, or very frequently

a character created by the author

• The narrator of Canterbury Tales is a persona created by the author to tell the stories.

Personification—Personification gives an inanimate object characteristics of life.

• And memory sleeps beneath the gray

And windless sky… “Rain in My Heart,” Edgar Lee Masters

Persuasion—used in writing or speech to convince the reader or listener to adopt a particular opinion or

course of action.

Plot—the sequence of events in which each event results from a previous one and causes the next. In most

novels, dramas, short stories, and narrative poems, the plot usually involves both characters in a central

conflict. The plot usually begins with an exposition that introduces the setting, the characters, and the

basic situation. This is followed by rising action, in which the central conflict is introduced and developed.

The conflict then increases until it reaches a high point of interest or suspense, the climax. The climax is

followed by the falling action, or the end of the central conflict. Any events that occur during the falling

action make up the resolution.

Poetry—one of the three major types of literature. Poetry is usually divided by lines and stanzas and often

employ rhythmic patterns.

Point of View—Point of view refers to the narrative method used in a short story, novel, or nonfiction selection.

1—first person—The narrator is a character in the story, narrating the action as he or she

understands it. First person point of view is indicated by the pronoun “I.”

2—third person—A third person narrator is not a participant in the action and thus maintains a

certain distance from the characters. Third person point of view is indicated

by he use of the pronouns “he,” “she,” “it,” and “they.”

3—third person omniscient—The narrator is all-knowing about the thoughts and feelings of

the characters. With this point of view, the writer can reveal

the emotional responses of all the characters and can

comment at will on the events taking place.

4—third person limited—The writer presents events as experienced by only one character.

5—perspective—a study and evaluation of the effects of an author’s choice of communicator

and his means of communication in a literary work that includes persona and

point of view

Polysyndeton—the use of many conjunctions has the effect of greatly slowing the prose.

• Ernest Hemingway was addicted to the use of “and” as an example of polysyndeton.

I did not say anything. I was always embarrassed by the words scared, glorious, and sacrifice and the expression in vain. . . Abstract words such as glory, honor, courage, or hallow were obscene beside the concrete names of villages, the number of roads, the names of rivers, the numbers of regiments and the dates. ( A Farewell to Arms, 191)

Prose—one of the three major types of literature. It is the most ordinary and most common form. Anything that

is not poetry, drama, or song is considered prose.

Protagonist—The protagonist is the character in opposition to the antagonist, the chief character in a drama

or work of fiction.

Pun—a play on the meaning of words.

• coals, colliers, choler, collar from ACT I, scene 1. Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

Refrain—Refrain is a group of words forming a phrase or a sentence and consisting of one or more lines

repeated at intervals in a poem, usually at the end of a stanza.

• Sir Thomas Wyatt—

Disdain me not without desert,

Nor leave me not so suddenly;

Since well ye wot that in my heart

I mean ye not but honestly.

Disdain me not.

Refuse me not without cause why,

Nor think me not to be unjust;

Since that by lot of fantasy

This careful knot need knit I must.

Refuse me not…

Repetition—the use, more than once, of any element of language—a sound, word, phrase, clause, or

sentence.

Rhetoric—describes the principles governing the art of writing effectively, eloquently, and persuasively

Rhetorical Appeals—ethos, pathos, and logos

1—Ethos—appeal to ethics or character

2—Pathos—appeals to emotions

3—Logos—appeals to logic or reason and is supported by evidence

Rhetorical Devices—the skill of using spoken or written communication effectively; the art of guiding the

reader or listener to agreement with the writer or speaker.

1—analogy—making clear a concept or idea by showing its similar to a more familiar

concept.

2—analysis of cause—identifying the forces responsible for an effect.

3—alternatives—considering of other options.

4—appeal—an address to the audience usually through the pronoun YOU or WE used

to link the speaker or writer to listener or reader.

5—assertion—to suggest for consideration as true or possible.

6—antithesis—a statement of purpose opposed to an earlier assertion or thesis.

7—anticipate an objection—to anticipate an objection, addressing it before anyone

else can raise the objection.

8—ad hominem—to attack another person’s argument as weak because of a human

falling that is not logically part of the argument.

9—ad misericordiam—an appeal for sympathy.

10—ad populum—appeal to the crowd.

11—ad vericundiam—an appeal to authority.

12—appeal to ignorance (argumentum ex silentio) appealing to ignorance as evidence

for something.

13—argument from omniscience: (e.g., All people believe in something. Everyone

knows that.) An arguer would need omniscience to

know about everyone's beliefs or disbeliefs or about

their knowledge. Beware of words like "all,"

"everyone," "everything," "absolute."

14—appeal to faith: (e.g., if you have no faith, you cannot learn) if the arguer relies on

faith as the bases of his argument, then you can gain little from

further discussion. Faith, by definition, relies on a belief that does not

rest on logic or evidence. Faith depends on irrational thought and

produces intransigence.

15—appeal to tradition (similar to the bandwagon fallacy): (e.g., astrology, religion,

slavery) just because people practice a tradition, says nothing

about its viability.

16—argument from authority (argumentum ad verecundiam): using the words of an

"expert" or authority as the bases of the argument instead

of using the logic or evidence that supports an argument.

17—appeal to consequences (argumentum ad consequentiam): an argument that

concludes a premise (usually a belief) as either true or

false based on whether the premise leads to desirable or

undesirable consequences

18—argument from adverse consequences: (e.g., We should judge the accused as

guilty, otherwise others will commit

similar crimes) Just because a repugnant

crime or act occurred, does not

necessarily mean that a defendant

committed the crime or that we should

judge him guilty

19—argumentum ad baculum: An argument based on an appeal to fear or a threat.

20—argumentum ad ignorantiam: A misleading argument used in reliance on people's

ignorance.

21—argumentum ad populum: An argument aimed to sway popular support by

appealing to sentimental weakness rather than facts

and reasons.

22—bandwagon fallacy: concluding that an idea has merit simply because many

people believe it or practice it. Simply because many people

may believe something says nothing about the fact of that

something.

23—begging the question (or assuming the answer)

24—circular reasoning: stating in one's proposition that which one aims to prove.

25—composition fallacy: when the conclusion of an argument depends on an

erroneous characteristic from parts of something to the whole

or vice versa.

26—confirmation bias (similar to observational selection): This refers to a form of

selective thinking that focuses on evidence that supports what

believers already believe while ignoring evidence that refutes

their beliefs. Confirmation bias plays a stronger role when

people base their beliefs upon faith, tradition and prejudice

27—confusion of correlation and causation: the invalid assumption that correlation

implies cause as "probably among the

two or three most serious and common

errors of human reasoning"

28—composition—arguing that a group must have the same qualities or characteristics

as its members.

29—concession—an acknowledgment of objections to a proposal.

30—Conditional or questionable fallacies

• Definist fallacy: involves the confusion between two notions by defining one in terms of the other

• Luddite fallacy: related to the belief that labor-saving technologies increase unemployment by reducing demand for labor

• Broken window fallacy: an argument which disregards lost opportunity costs (typically non-obvious, difficult to determine or otherwise hidden) associated with destroying property of others, or other ways of externalizing costs onto others.

• Slippery slope: argument states that a relatively small first step inevitably leads to a chain of related events culminating in some significant impact

30—consequences of events—listing or indicating what resulted from a particular

event or condition.

31—contradictory premises—the main premises contradict each other.

32—correction of erroneous views of statement—pointing out where another

person’s observations need

modification or correction.

33—corrective measures—proposing measures to eliminate undesirable conditions.

34—description—the enumeration of characteristics of objects that belong to the same

class.

35—definition—to define a concept like “excessive violence” to help resolve a question

by narrowing or clarifying meaning.

36—deduction—arguing from a general point to a particular point or application.

37—direct address—to speak to directly, remove any separation between speaker and

audience.

38—division—arguing that an individual must have the same qualities or characteristics

of the group.

39—dicto simpliciter—an argument based on n unqualified generalization.

40—either/or fallacy—requires absolutes which do not allow for intermediate cases;

very clear statements or choices.

41—emotional appeal—a speaker’s or writer’s effort to engage feelings in the audience

or reader.

42—equivocation—using the same term with a different meaning in the same

argument.

43—excluded middle (or false dichotomy): considering only the extremes. Many people

use Aristotelian either/or logic tending to describe in terms of

up/down, black/white, true/false, love/hate, etc.

44—extended metaphor—a protracted metaphor which makes a series of parallel

comparisons throughout the speech or writing.

45—false analogy—wrongful comparisons of dissimilar situations, conditions, or events.

46—faulty dilemma—the major premise presents a choice that does not exhaust the

possibilities.

47—Faulty generalizations:

• Accident (fallacy): when an exception to the generalization is ignored.

• No True Scotsman: when a generalization is made true only when a counterexample is ruled out on shaky grounds.

• Cherry picking: act of pointing at individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position, while ignoring a significant portion of related cases or data that may contradict that position

• Composition: where one infers that something is true of the whole from the fact that it is true of some (or even every) part of the whole

• Dicto simpliciter

• Converse accident (a dicto secundum quid ad dictum

simpliciter): when an exception to a generalization is wrongly called

for

• False analogy: false analogy consists of an error in the substance of an argument (the content of the analogy itself), not an error in the logical structure of the argument

• Hasty generalization (fallacy of insufficient statistics, fallacy of insufficient sample, fallacy of the lonely fact, leaping to a conclusion, hasty induction, secundum quid)

• Misleading vividness: involves describing an occurrence in vivid detail, even if it is an exceptional occurrence, to convince someone that it is a problem

• Overwhelming exception (hasty generalization): It is a generalization which is accurate, but comes with one or more qualifications which eliminate so many cases that what remains is much less impressive than the initial statement might have led one to assume

• Pathetic fallacy: when an inanimate object is declared to have characteristics of animate objects

• Spotlight fallacy: when a person uncritically assumes that all members or cases of a certain class or type are like those that receive the most attention or coverage in the media

• Thought-terminating cliché: a commonly used phrase, sometimes passing as folk wisdom, used to quell cognitive dissonance, conceal lack of thought-entertainment, move onto other topics etc. but in any case, end the debate with a cliche—not a point.

47—Formal fallacies are arguments that are fallacious due to an error in their form or

technical structure. All formal fallacies are specific types of non

sequiturs.

• Appeal to law: an argument which implies that legislation is a moral imperative.

• Appeal to probability: assumes that because something could happen, it is inevitable that it will happen. This is the premise on which Murphy's Law is based.

• Argument from fallacy: assumes that if an argument for some conclusion is fallacious, then the conclusion itself is false.

• Base rate fallacy: using weak evidence to make a probability judgment without taking into account known empirical statistics about the probability.

• Conjunction fallacy: assumption that an outcome simultaneously satisfying multiple conditions is more probable than an outcome satisfying a single one of them.

• Correlative based fallacies

• Denying the correlative: where attempts are made at

introducing alternatives where there

are one.

• Suppressed correlative: where a correlative is redefined so

that one alternative is made

impossible.

• Fallacy of necessity: a degree of unwarranted necessity is placed in the conclusion based on the necessity of one or more of its premises.

• False dilemma (false dichotomy): where two alternative statements are held to be the only possible options, when in reality there are more.

• Is–ought problem: the inappropriate inference that because something is some way or other, so it ought to be that way.

• Homunculus fallacy: where a "middle-man" is used for explanation, this usually leads to regressive middle-man. Explanations without actually explaining the real nature of a function or a process. Instead, it explains the concept in terms of the concept itself, without first defining or explaining the original concept.

• Masked man fallacy: the substitution of identical designators in a true statement can lead to a false one.

• Naturalistic fallacy: a fallacy that claims that if something is natural, pleasant, popular, etc. then it is good or right.

• Nirvana fallacy: when solutions to problems are said not to be right because they are not perfect.

• Negative proof fallacy: that, because a premise cannot be proven false, the premise must be true; or that, because a premise cannot be proven true, the premise must be false.

• Package-deal fallacy: consists of assuming that things often grouped together by tradition or culture must always be grouped that way.

• Equivocation Fallacy: In which a speaker will use a general definition of a term to a specific insinuation.

48—guilt or innocence by association—providing examples that prove the guilt or

innocence of a person based on his/her

actions, beliefs, or motivations.

49—half truths (suppressed evidence): A statement usually intended to deceive that

omits some of the facts necessary for an accurate description.

49—hypothesis contrary to the fact—beginning with a premise that is not necessarily

true and then drawing conclusions from it.

50—inquiry as introduction—setting an essay in motion by raising a question and

suggesting that the answer may be interesting or

important.

51—illustration of ways to correct a condition—create specific examples to correct a

condition or situation and give very

clear, concise details.

52—Informal fallacies are arguments that are fallacious for reasons other than

structural (formal) flaws.

• Argument from repetition (argumentum ad nauseam): signifies that it has been discussed extensively (possibly by different people) until nobody cares to discuss it anymore

• Appeal to ridicule: a specific type of appeal to emotion where an argument is made by presenting the opponent's argument in a way that makes it appear ridiculous

• Argument from ignorance (appeal to ignorance): The fallacy of assuming that something is true/false because it has not been proven false/true.

• Begging the question (petitio principii): where the conclusion of an argument is implicitly or explicitly assumed in one of the premises

• Circular cause and consequence: where the consequence of the phenomenon is claimed to be its root cause

• Continuum fallacy (fallacy of the beard): appears to demonstrate that two states or conditions cannot be considered distinct (or do not exist at all) because between them there exists a continuum of states. According to the fallacy, differences in quality cannot result from differences in quantity.

• Correlation does not imply causation (cum hoc ergo propter hoc): a phrase used in the sciences and the statistics to emphasize that correlation between two variables does not imply that one causes the other

• Square logic: A complex argument which is an iteration of non-sequitur arguments used as a premise for an unrelated conclusion

• Demanding negative proof: attempting to avoid the burden of proof for some claim by demanding proof of the contrary from whoever questions that claim

• Equivocation: the misleading use of a term with more than one meaning (by glossing over which meaning is intended at a particular time)

• Etymological fallacy: which reasons that the original or historical meaning of a word or phrase is necessarily similar to its actual present-day meaning.

• Fallacies of distribution

• Division: where one reasons logically that something

true of a thing must also be true of all or some

of its parts

• Composition: where one reasons logically that

something true of part of a whole must

also be true of the whole

• Ecological fallacy: inferences about the nature of specific individuals are based solely upon

• If-by-whiskey: An argument that supports both sides of an issue by using terms that are selectively emotionally sensitive.

• Fallacy of many questions (complex question, fallacy of presupposition, loaded question, plurium interrogationum): someone asks a question that presupposes something that has not been proven or accepted by all the people involved. This fallacy is often used rhetorically, so that the question limits direct replies to those that serve the questioner's agenda.

• Fallacy of the single cause ("joint effect", or "causal oversimplification"): occurs when it is assumed that there is one, simple cause of an outcome when in reality it may have been caused by a number of only jointly sufficient causes.

▪ False attribution: occurs when an advocate appeals to an irrelevant, unqualified, unidentified, biased or fabricated source in support of an argument contextomy (Fallacy of quoting out of context): refers to the selective excerpting of words from their original linguistic context in a way that distorts the source’s intended meaning

• False compromise/middle ground: asserts that a compromise between two positions is correct

• Gambler's fallacy: the incorrect belief that the likelihood of a random event can be affected by or predicted from other, independent events

• Historian's fallacy: occurs when one assumes that decision makers of the past viewed events from the same perspective and having the same information as those subsequently analyzing the decision. It is not to be confused with presentism, a mode of historical analysis in which present-day ideas (such as moral standards) are projected into the past.

• Incomplete comparison: where not enough information is provided to make a complete comparison

• Inconsistent comparison: where different methods of comparison are used, leaving one with a false impression of the whole comparison

• Intentional fallacy: addresses the assumption that the meaning intended by the author of a literary work is of primary importance

• Moving the goalpost (raising the bar): argument in which evidence presented in response to a specific claim is dismissed and some other (often greater) evidence is demanded

• Perfect solution fallacy: where an argument assumes that a perfect solution exists and/or that a solution should be rejected because some part of the problem would still exist after it was implemented

• Post hoc ergo propter hoc: also known as false cause, coincidental correlation or correlation not causation.

• Proof by verbosity (argumentum verbosium) (proof by intimidation): submission of others to an argument too complex and verbose to reasonably deal with in all its intimate details. see also Gish Gallop and argument from authority.

• Prosecutor's fallacy: a low probability of false matches does not mean a low probability of some false match being found

• Psychologist's fallacy: occurs when an observer presupposes the objectivity of his own perspective when analyzing a behavioral event

• Red herring: This occurs when a speaker attempts to distract an audience by deviating from the topic at hand by introducing a separate argument which the speaker believes will be easier to speak to.

• Regression fallacy: ascribes cause where none exists. The flaw is failing to account for natural fluctuations. It is frequently a special kind of the post hoc fallacy.

• Reification (hypostatization): a fallacy of ambiguity, when an abstraction (abstract belief or hypothetical construct) is treated as if it were a concrete, real event or physical entity. In other words, it is the error of treating as a "real thing" something which is not a real thing, but merely an idea.

• Retrospective determinism: the argument that because some event has occurred, its occurrence must have been inevitable beforehand

• Special pleading: where a proponent of a position attempts to cite something as an exemption to a generally accepted rule or principle without justifying the exemption

• Suppressed correlative: an argument which tries to redefine a correlative (two mutually exclusive options) so that one alternative encompasses the other, thus making one alternative impossible

• Wrong direction: where cause and effect are reversed. The cause is said to be the effect and vice versa.

52—loaded questions: embodies an assumption that, if answered, indicates an implied

agreement

53—meaningless question: If everything proved possible, then the possibility exists for

the impossible, a contradiction. Although everything may

not prove possible, there may occur an infinite number of

possibilities as well as an infinite number of impossibilities.

Many meaningless questions include empty words such as

"is," "are," "were," "was," "am," "be," or "been."

54—non-sequitur—the conclusion does not follow in logic from the preceding

argument.

55—observational selection (similar to confirmation bias): pointing out favorable

circumstances while ignoring the unfavorable.

56—over generalizing or hasty generalization—too few or too many instances are

presented to reach an accurate

conclusion.

57—post hoc, ergo propter hoc: Latin for "It happened after, so it was caused by."

Similar to a non sequitur, but time dependent.

58—proving non-existence: when an arguer cannot provide the evidence for his

claims, he may challenge his opponent to prove it doesn't

exist. Although one may prove non-existence in special

limitations, such as showing that a box does not contain

certain items, one cannot prove universal or absolute non-

existence, or non-existence out of ignorance. One cannot

prove something that does not exist. The proof of

existence must come from those who make the claims.

59—premise and the common ground—the terms of the premise must be accepted as

true by the reader or the audience.

60—Propositional fallacies:

• Affirming a disjunct: concluded that one logical disjunction must be false because the other disjunct is true; A or B; A; therefore not B.

• Affirming the consequent: the antecedent in an indicative conditional is claimed to be true because the consequent is true; if A, then B; B, therefore A.

• Denying the antecedent: the consequent in an indicative conditional is claimed to be false because the antecedent is false; if A, then B; not A, therefore not B.

61—Quantificational fallacies:

• Existential fallacy: an argument has two universal premises and a particular conclusion, but the premises do not establish the truth of the conclusion.

• Proof by example: where examples are offered as inductive proof for a universal proposition. ("This apple is red, therefore all apples are red.")

60—rebuttal—final opposition to an assertion; disprove or refute the ideas or opinions of

another person.

61—red herring: when the arguer diverts the attention by changing the subject.

• Ad hominem: attacking the person instead of the argument. A form of this is reductio ad Hitlerum.

• Argumentum ad baculum ("appeal to the stick" or "appeal to force"): where an argument is made through coercion or threats of force towards an opposing party

• Argumentum ad populum ("appeal to belief", "appeal to the majority", "appeal to the people"): where a proposition is claimed to be true solely because many people believe it to be true

• Association fallacy (guilt by association)

• Appeal to authority: where an assertion is deemed true because of the position or authority of the person asserting it.[2][3]

o Appeal to accomplishment: where an assertion is deemed true or false based on the accomplishments of the proposer.

• Appeal to consequences: a specific type of appeal to emotion where an argument concludes that a premise is either true or false based on whether the premise leads to desirable or undesirable consequences for a particular party

• Appeal to emotion: where an argument is made due to the manipulation of emotions, rather than the use of valid reasoning

o Appeal to consequences: a specific type of appeal to emotion

o Appeal to fear: a specific type of appeal to emotion where an argument is made by increasing fear and prejudice towards the opposing side

o Appeal to flattery: a specific type of appeal to emotion where an argument is made due to the use of flattery to gather support

o Appeal to pity: a specific type of appeal to emotion

o Appeal to ridicule: a specific type of appeal to emotion

o Appeal to spite: a specific type of appeal to emotion where an argument is made through exploiting people's bitterness or spite towards an opposing party

o Wishful thinking: a specific type of appeal to emotion where a decision is made according to what might be pleasing to imagine, rather than according to evidence or reason

• Appeal to motive: where a premise is dismissed, by calling into question the motives of its proposer

• Appeal to nature: an argument wherein something is deemed correct or good if it is natural, and is deemed incorrect or bad if it is unnatural

• Appeal to novelty: where a proposal is claimed to be superior or better solely because it is new or modern

• Appeal to poverty (argumentum ad lazarum): thinking the conclusion is affected by a party's financial situation.

• Appeal to wealth (argumentum ad crumenam): concluding that a statement's truth value is affected by a party's financial situation. Very similar to Agrumentum ad lazarum. The terms ad lazarum and ad crumenam can be interchangeable.

• Argument from silence (argumentum ex silentio): a conclusion based on silence or lack of contrary evidence

• Appeal to tradition: where a thesis is deemed correct on the basis that it has a long-standing tradition behind it

• Chronological snobbery: where a thesis is deemed incorrect because it was commonly held when something else, clearly false, was also commonly held

• Genetic fallacy: where a conclusion is suggested based solely on something or someone's origin rather than its current meaning or context. This overlooks any difference to be found in the present situation, typically transferring the positive or negative esteem from the earlier context.

• Judgmental language: insulting or pejorative language to influence the recipient's judgment

• Poisoning the well: where adverse information about a target is preemptively presented to an audience, with the intention of discrediting or ridiculing everything that the target person is about to say

• Sentimental fallacy: it would be more pleasant if; therefore it ought to be; therefore it is

• Straw man argument: based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position

o Perverted analogy: twisting an opponents analogy to mean something broader than intended

o False surrender (or agree to disagree): offering truce or falsely surrendering the position in order to misrepresent opponent's position as unprovable or ad nauseam while ignoring Aumann's agreement theorem

• Style over substance fallacy: occurs when one emphasizes the way in which the argument is presented, while marginalizing (or outright ignoring) the content of the argument

• Texas sharpshooter fallacy: Picking your target after you shoot the dart ensuring that you are right

• Two wrongs make a right: occurs when it is assumed that if one wrong is committed, another wrong will cancel it out

• Tu quoque: the argument states that a certain position is false or wrong and/or should be disregarded because its proponent fails to act consistently in accordance with that position

62—reification fallacy: when people treat an abstract belief or hypothetical construct as

if it represented a concrete event or physical entity.

63—reduce to the absurd—to show the foolishness of an argument by taking the

argument to its logical conclusion.

64—rhetorical question—to ask a question of an audience or reader to engage them

without having a response from the audience or reader.

65—self-evident truth—proceeding from an unwarranted assumption to a foregone

conclusion (time is money)

66—specious reasoning—having only apparent logic; not truly logical but presented to

be as such.

67—slippery slope: a change in procedure, law, or action, will result in adverse

consequences. It does not necessarily follow that just because we

make changes that a slippery slope will occur.

68—special pleading: the assertion of new or special matter to offset the opposing

party's allegations. A presentation of an argument that

emphasizes only a favorable or single aspect of the question at

issue.

69—statistics of small numbers: similar to observational. Simply because someone

can point to a few favorable numbers says nothing

about the overall chances.

70—straw man: creating a false scenario and then attacking it

71—Syllogistic fallacies are logical fallacies that occur in syllogisms.

• Affirmative conclusion from a negative premise: when a categorical syllogism has a positive conclusion, but at least one negative premise.

• Fallacy of exclusive premises: a categorical syllogism that is invalid because both of its premises are negative.

• Fallacy of four terms: a categorical syllogism has four terms.

• Illicit major: a categorical syllogism that is invalid because its major term is undistributed in the major premise but distributed in the conclusion.

• Fallacy of the undistributed middle: the middle term in a categorical syllogism is not distributed.

71—thesis—a statement of purpose or intent.

72—two wrongs make a right: trying to justify what we did by accusing someone else

of doing the same. The guilt of the accuser has no

relevance to the discussion.

73—under/over statement—to say considerably more or less than a condition

warrants; usually applied for ironic or unexpected contrast.

74—Use-mention error: confusing a word or a concept with something that supposedly

exists.

Rhetorical Shift—a shift from tone, attitude, etc. Some signal words for a shift include: however, but, even

though, although

Rhyme—the use of matching sounds, generally accented vowels, at the end of two lines or more of poetry. It

contributes to the musical quality of poetry.

Rhyme Scheme—a regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem. The rhyme scheme of a poem is indicated by

lower case letters. Each rhyme is assigned a different letter of the alphabet

Rhythm—the measured movement or beat in the musical flow of poetry established by the technical resources

of both the poet and the oral interpreter of his work. Rhythm is really created by many factors

involved in the reading of poetry.

Run-on line (enjambment)—the continuation of the though and structure of a poetic sentence from one line to

the next without pause. A line in which thought and structure conclude

simultaneously is referred to as end-stopped, as in the second line of the closed

couplet. The run-on line provides flexibility and parallels human discourse more

truly than the end-stopped couplet does.

• Auden’s Letter to Lord Byron—

It is a commonplace that’s hardly worth

A poet’s while to make profound or terse,

That now the sun does not go round the earth,

That man’s no center of the universe.

Sarcasm—A form of verbal irony in which, under the guise of praise, a caustic and bitter expression of strong

and personal disapproval is given. Sarcasm is personal, jeering, intended to hurt, and is intended

as a sneering taunt.

Satire—Satire is a literary manner that blends a critical attitude with humor and wit for the purpose of

improving society. Satire can be gentle and sympathetic, or it can be angry, bitter, and biting. The

criticism of a person, human nature, events movements, or institutions by the use of exaggeration,

ridicule, sarcasm, irony, and humor in order to reduce the subjects to absurdity.

• Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels is an example of satire,

Scansion—the identifying and marking of the metrical patterns of a poem for purposes of analysis

Schemes—arrangements of ideas, words, or phrases that are stylistically effective. The pattern of the words

effectively serves to reinforce the meaning.

1--schemes of addition-- effective writers can add words or phrases to a sentence to vary the

style and draw emphasis to certain parts of the sentence. (apposition,

parenthesis)

2--schemes of balance—the syntactic structures of each sentence supports its meaning. Similar

ideas are expressed in similar grammatical structure, contrasting ideas

in contrasting grammatical structures, or a series of ideas in climactic

order. (parallelism, chiasmus, climax, antithesis)

3--schemes of omission-- a writer omits a word or phrase for emphasis. (zeugma, asyndeton,

polysyndeton)

4--schemes of repetition-- the use, more than once, of any element of language—a sound, word,

phrase, clause, or sentence. (anaphora)

5--scheme of sound-- a kind of repetition that is particularly effective n oratory is the repetition of

certain sounds within a paragraph or a sentence. Such use of sounds

reinforces meaning not only in orations, but in written prose as well.

However, sounds must serve a purpose. Meaningless repetition of sounds

would be monotonous, and to be effective, sounds must reinforce the

meaning in some way. (alliteration, assonance, consonance)

6--schemes of word order—the syntactical order of a sentence supports meaning. (anastrophe)

Science-fiction—combine the elements of fiction and fantasy with scientific fact. This type of writing is most

effective when the author create believable settings an characters, and balances new ideas

with familiar details. The story elements can be possible or impossible; settings are in the

future.

Sensory Language—writing or speech that appeals to one or more of the five senses.

Setting—the time and place of the action. The setting includes all the details of a place and time—the year,

the time of day, even the weather. The place may be a specific country, state, region, community,

neighborhood, building, institution, or home. Details such as dialect, clothing, customs, and modes of

transportation are often used to establish the setting.

Shift—a change in tone, mood, setting, or characterization that affects the movement of the selection.

Short Story—a brief work of fiction that presents a sequence of events or plot. The plot deals with a central

conflict faced by a main character. A short story is concise and creates a single effect, or

dominant impression, on its reader. The events in a short story usually communicate a

message about life or human nature.

Simile---a comparison between two unlike things using the words like or as

• The rugby ball was like a giant egg, which he held carefully while he ran.

Soliloquy—a long speech in a play or in a prose work made by a character who is alone. The character

reveals his or her private thoughts and feelings to the audience or the reader.

• Shakespeare—Hamlet, Macbeth, and Othello give soliloquies during the plays.

• Milton—Satan’s Sun Soliloquy

Speaker—the imaginary voice assumed by the writer of a poem.

Sonnet—generally a fourteen-line lyric which uses any of several different rhyme schemes or structures

• Shakespeare #18—

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?

Thou art more lovely and more temperate:

Rough winds do shake the buds of May,

And summer’s lease hath too short a date:

Sometimes too hot the eye of heaven shines,

And often is his gold complexion dimm’d;

And every fair from fair sometime declines,

By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd;

But thy eternal summer shall not fade

Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;

Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,

When in eternal lines to time thou growest:

So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,

So long lives this and this gives life to thee.

Stage Direction—are notes included in drama to describe how the work is to be performed on stage. They are usually printed in italics and enclosed within parentheses or brackets.

Stanza—a group of poetic lines arranged into a pattern generally suggested by a rhyme scheme. Stanzas are

roughly the equivalent of paragraphs in prose.

Stream of consciousness---an author’s representation of the flow of inner thoughts, feelings, and memories

of a character, regardless of logical order and transitions. This approach is

based on the assumption that our half-conscious and even conscious thoughts

and feeling do not come to us in neat patterns or in carefully constructed plots.

• William Faulkner The Sound and the Fury—Caddy uncaught me and we crawled through. Uncle Maury said to not let anybody see us, so we better stoop over, Caddy said. Stoop over, Benjy. Like this, see. We stooped over and crossed the garden, where the flowers rasped and rattled against us. The ground was hard. We climbed the fence, where the pigs were grunting and snuffing. I expect they're sorry because one of them got killed today, Caddy said. The ground was hard, churned and knotted. Keep your hands in your pockets, Caddy said. Or they'll get froze. You dont want your hands froze on Christmas, do you.

Stress—the emphasis placed upon syllables in poetry which are more dominant than others. The emphasis is

generally based on a common or accepted pronunciation of a word; however, the sense of a word,

its position in a line, or the rhetorical necessities involved in reading poetry aloud may alter the

accepted or dictionary stress patterns among the syllables. Stressing syllables to accommodate the

meaning or emotional content of a poem is probably more important than forcing stresses to fit

metrical patterns prevailing in a poem.

Structure—the basic organization or arrangement of events, details, words, or parts in a literary work.

Style—an author’s choice of words and their arrangements in various patterns of syntax, imagery, and rhythm

Surprise Ending—a conclusion that is unexpected. Sometimes a surprise ending follows a false resolution.

The reader thinks the conflict has been resolved but then is confronted with a new twist

that changes the outcome of the plot. Often a surprise ending is foreshadowed.

• O. Henry “The Gift of the Magi”-- Jim had not yet seen his beautiful present. She held it out to him eagerly upon her open palm. The dull precious metal seemed to flash with a reflection of her bright and ardent spirit.

"Isn't it a dandy, Jim? I hunted all over town to find it. You'll have to look at the time a hundred times a day now. Give me your watch. I want to see how it looks on it."

Instead of obeying, Jim tumbled down on the couch and put his hands under the back of his head and smiled.

"Dell," said he, "let's put our Christmas presents away and keep 'em a while. They're too nice to use just at present. I sold the watch to get the money to buy your combs. And now suppose you put the chops on."

Suspense—a feeling of anxious uncertainty about the outcome of events in a literary work.

Syllogism—a deductive system of formal logic that presents two premises, major or minor, that leads to a

conclusion

• All men are mortal; Greeks are men; so all Greek men are mortal.

Symbol—Symbol is any object, happening, person, or place which stands not only for itself but also for

something else.

• The lamb is a symbol of innocence in William Blake’s “The Lamb.”

• To Mr. Shimada and his faithful employees in Yoshiko Uchida’s “Of Dry Goods and Black Bow Ties,” the bow tie is a symbol of dignity, honesty, and respectability.

Synecdoche—related to classification and division; understanding one thing from another, thus a part is

substituted for the whole, or the species for the genus.

• Thomas Campbell “Ye Mariners of England”—

With thunders from her native oak,

She quells the flood below.

Tall Tale—come out of oral tradition of the American frontier. They typically involve characters with highly

exaggerated abilities and qualities.

• Mark Twain “The Celebrate Jumping Frog of Calaveras County”

Technique—any resources or any combinations of means used by an author to shape his material, such as

his choice and arrangement of words (style), his organization of his material (structure), or his

handling of characters (characterization).

Theme—The main idea of message a writer expresses in a work of literature. It is a writer’s perception about

life or humanity shared with a reader. Themes are seldom stated directly and may reveal

themselves only through careful reading and analysis.

• A theme of Doris Lessing’s “A Mild Attck of the Locusts” is that life goes on.

Tone—Tone is the attitude a writer takes toward a subject. It might be humorous, serious, bitter, angry, or

detached among other possibilities.

• The tone of Thomas Hardy’s “Ah, Are You Digging on My Grave?” is one of bittersweet humor.

Tragedy—a work of literature, especially a play, that results in a catastrophe for the main character. In ancient

Greek drama, the main character was always a significant person—king, hero—and the cause of

the tragedy was a tragic flaw, or weakness, in his or her character.

• In Macbeth, by Shakespeare, Macbeth’s tragic flaw is excessive ambition.

Tropes—involve the alterations in the usual meanings of words or phrases. (pun, metaphor, simile,

personification, irony, hyperbole, litotes, synecdoche, metonymy, oxymoron, paradox, onomatopoeia,

rhetorical question)

Understatement—the deliberate playing down of an emotion, thought, judgment, or situation. When emotion

is involved, an author will sometimes employ understatement to imply that the emotion is

too powerful or too vast to express. The lack of stress creates an ironic difference

between what the author actually says and what the circumstances would really allow him

to say.

• In “Field Trip, Naomi Shihab Nye uses understatement when she says that the woman who cut off her finger was “distracted.”

Urban Legend—a contemporary story that is told in many versions around the world.

Wit—intellectually amusing language that surprises and delights the reader

• Alexander Pope—

True wit is Nature to advantage dressed,

What oft was thought, but ne’er well expressed.

Zeugma—the writer uses one word to govern several successive words or clauses.

• Miss Bolo went home in a flood of tears and a sedan.

Abrams, M.H. A Glossay of Literary Terms: Sixth Edition. Harcourt Brace: New York, 1993.

Cuddon, J.A. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory: Fourth Edition. Penguin Books: London, 1998.

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Hibbard, Allison, C. Hugh Holman, and William Flint Thrall. A Handbook to Literature. The Odyssey Press: New York, 1960.

 

Hughes, William; Lavery, Jonathan (2004), Critical Thinking: An Introduction to the Basic Skills (4th ed.), Peterborough, Ontario, Canada: Broadview Press, ISBN 1-55111-573-5, retrieved 30 November 2010 

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Sinnott-Armstrong, Walter; Fogelin, Robert (2010), Understanding Arguments: An Introduction to Informal Logic (8th ed.), Belmont, California: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, ISBN 978-0-495-60395-5, retrieved 30 November 2010

 

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