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Question
- the author tells the story through a character who refers to himself as \i\ 2. with unlimited knowledge 3. stand for themselves and something else 4. third person but from the viewpoint of one character 5. a character who highlights traits in the main character by contrasting them 6. the author directly tells us about the character or has another character describe him 7. undergoes some distinct change of personality, character, or outlook after an epiphany 8. an exaggerated form of verbal or rhetorical irony when one thing is said but another is meant (tends toward sarcasm) 9. the arrangement of two or more ideas, characters, actions, settings, phrases, or words side - by - side in similar narrative moments for the purpose of comparison, contrast, rhetorical effect, suspense, or character development 10. complex characters with the three - dimensional qualities of real people 11. essentially the same person from beginning to end 12. the vantage point from which a narrative is told---can be mixed 13. the narrator is not a character, referring to the characters as \he/she\ 14. the narrator addresses a \you\ 15. usually has one or two predominant traits 16. the third person narrator cannot comment, interpret, or enter a characters mind 17. the meaning cannot be definitely determined (is the ghost there or is he crazy?) 18. part of speech (often ending in -ly) that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb 19. figure in a literary work 20. discourse between two or more characters 21. a character and a force outside of himself/herself 22. the attitude of the author toward the subject matter of a literary work 23. the general feeling created in the reader by the work at a given point 24. a contradiction or incongruity between appearance and reality 25. characters, images, settings, and story patterns that exist universally (the snake, the coming of the savior) 26. unusual use of language that goes beyond the literal meaning, including metaphor, simile, etc. 27. a special kind of flat character, a reoccurring stereotype in a culture (mad scientist) 28. the association of two distinct things by representing one with the other 29. the time, place, circumstances of the narrative 30. an abstract idea is relayed through a narrative, giving it both concrete and abstract meanings (christian symbols) 31. the arrangement and interrelation of events in a literary work 32. the turning point in the action occurs (generally with the climax)
Brief Explanations
This appears to be a vocabulary - building exercise related to literary terms. Each description corresponds to a specific literary concept. For example, "the author tells the story through a character who refers to himself as 'I'" is the first - person narrator. By matching the descriptions with the correct literary terms, we can answer the questions.
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- First - person narrator
- Omniscient narrator
- Symbol
- Limited third - person narrator
- Foil
- Direct characterization
- Character change
- Verbal irony
- Parallelism
- Round character
- Static character
- Point of view
- Third - person objective narrator
- Second - person narrator
- Flat character
- Unreliable narrator
- Ambiguity
- Adverb
- Character
- Dialogue
- Conflict
- Tone
- Mood
- Irony
- Archetype
- Figurative language
- Stock character
- Metonymy
- Setting
- Allegory
- Plot
- Climax