- Allegory: A narrative where agents, actions, and settings represent a second, correlated order of meanings, often historical or ideological. Example: George Orwell’s Animal Farm is an allegory for the Russian Revolution.
- Alliteration: The repetition of initial speech sounds (usually consonants) in a sequence of nearby words for poetic effect. Example: Stan Lee’s characters like "Peter Parker" or "Bruce Banner".
- Allusion: An indirect reference to a person, place, event, or work of art outside the text without explicit identification. Example: The title of Haruki Murakami’s 1Q84 alludes to George Orwell’s 1984.
- Amplification: Embellishing a simple sentence with more details to increase its significance. Example: Roald Dahl’s description of "good thoughts" in The Twits.
- Anadiplosis: The repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the next. Example: "Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering".
- Anagram: A word puzzle where the letters of a word or phrase are rearranged to create a new one. Example: Hannibal Lecter’s alias "Louis Friend" is an anagram for "iron sulfide".
- Analogy: A comparison between two things to help explain a similarity that may not be obvious. Example: Carl Sagan comparing the universe’s history to a single Earth year.
- Anaphora: Repeating the same word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or sentences. Example: Martin Luther King Jr.’s "I have a dream" speech.
- Anastrophe: The deliberate inversion of typical word order in a sentence for emphasis or poetic effect. Example: "In the night sky shimmered the stars".
- Anecdote: A short, personal story used to illustrate a specific point. Example: Sharing a story about failing a test to illustrate that persistence pays off.
- Antagonist: The character or force that opposes the protagonist in a story. Example: Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter series.
- Anthropomorphism: Nonhuman things like animals or objects behaving as humans with speech and complex emotions. Example: Talking clocks and singing teapots in Beauty and the Beast.
- Antimetabole: Repetition of words in successive clauses, but in reverse order. Example: "Eat to live, not live to eat".
- Antithesis: Placing two contrasting and polarized sentiments next to each other using parallel syntax. Example: "One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind".
- Aphorism: A concise statement of a general principle or truth. Example: "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely".
- Apostrophe: Addressing an absent person, imaginary person, or personified abstraction. Example: "O Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo?".
- Archetype: A universal symbol, character type, or theme that recurs across literature. Example: The "hero’s journey" in The Odyssey.
- Assonance: The repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words to create rhythm or musicality. Example: "The light of the fire is a sight to admire".
- Asyndeton: The deliberate omission of conjunctions between parts of a sentence for dramatic effect. Example: "I came, I saw, I conquered".
- Bathos: A sudden shift in tone from the serious or elevated to the trivial or ridiculous. Example: "He spent his final hour of life doing what he loved most: arguing with his wife".
- Bildungsroman: A genre focusing on the moral and psychological growth of the protagonist from youth to adulthood. Example: Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre.
- Blank Verse: Unrhymed lines written in iambic pentameter. Example: Milton’s Paradise Lost.
- Cacophony: The use of harsh, discordant, or unmusical sounds in writing. Example: Lewis Carroll’s "Jabberwocky" ("frumious Bandersnatch").
- Catharsis: The emotional release or purification experienced by the audience after a tragic event. Example: The ending of To Kill a Mockingbird when Boo Radley saves the children.
- Chiasmus: A literary technique where the word order of one of two parallel clauses is inverted. Example: "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country".
- Circumlocution: The deliberate use of excessive words and complicated structures to convolute meaning. Example: Roundabout directions given by the Queen of Hearts in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
- Cliché: An overused expression or idea that has lost its impact. Example: "Time heals all wounds".
- Cliffhanger: Ending a section or story at a point of high suspense. Example: Episodes of the show Lost ending before a major reveal.
- Colloquialism: The use of informal speech or slang in formal writing to make dialogue seem realistic. Example: Mark Twain using "ain’t" and "yonder" in Huckleberry Finn.
- Conceit: An extended, striking, or surprising comparison between two vastly different things. Example: John Donne comparing two lovers to the legs of a compass.
- Connotation: Associate or emotional meanings implied by a word beyond its literal definition. Example: "Home" connoting warmth and security.
- Consonance: The repetition of consonant sounds in close proximity, usually at the end or middle of words. Example: "The lumpy, bumpy road".
- Denotation: The literal or dictionary meaning of a word. Example: "Home" meaning a place of residence.
- Deus ex machina: A plot device where an improbable event or character suddenly resolves a crisis. Example: The eagles arriving to rescue Frodo and Sam in The Return of the King.
- Diction: An author's specific choice of words and style of expression. Example: Hemingway’s concise diction versus Faulkner’s elaborate prose.
- Didactic: A work intended to convey a moral, educational, or ethical message. Example: Aesop’s "The Tortoise and the Hare".
- Dystopia: An imagined society characterized by oppression and injustice. Example: George Orwell’s 1984.
- Elegy: A formal poem expressing sorrow or lamentation for the dead. Example: Thomas Gray’s "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard".
- Ellipsis: Omission of words or phrases, often indicated by three dots (...), to create a sense of mystery or hesitation. Example: "I was thinking … maybe we could go somewhere quieter".
- Epigraph: A short quotation at the beginning of a work to introduce its theme. Example: Hunter S. Thompson quoting Samuel Johnson at the start of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
- Epiphany: A character's sudden realization or spiritual manifestation. Example: Pip realizing what love truly means in Great Expectations.
- Epithet: A descriptive phrase used to highlight a characteristic of a person or thing. Example: Keats' "sunburnt mirth" to describe rural life.
- Euphemism: A soft or inoffensive phrase used to replace a harsh or unpleasant one. Example: Using "passed away" instead of "died".
- Euphony: The use of pleasant, harmonious, and melodious sounds in language. Example: "The murmuring of innumerable bees".
- Exposition: Background information about characters and setting provided at the beginning of a story. Example: The prologue of Romeo and Juliet.
- Fable: A short fictional story, often featuring animals, that teaches a moral lesson. Example: "The Fox and the Grapes".
- Farce: Comedy based on exaggerated situations, physical humor, and absurd characters. Example: The Importance of Being Earnest.
- Flashback: Interruption of the chronological sequence to depict earlier events. Example: Flashback scenes providing context in To Kill a Mockingbird.
- Flashforward: Representing events that will occur in the future. Example: Ebenezer Scrooge seeing his future death in A Christmas Carol.
- Foil: A character who contrasts with another character to highlight specific traits. Example: Draco Malfoy as a foil to Harry Potter.
- Foreshadowing: Hinting at future plot developments early in the story to build suspense. Example: Luke Skywalker’s vision in The Empire Strikes Back.
- Frame Story: A narrative that contains another story within it. Example: Frankenstein told through the letters of Captain Walton.
- Free Verse: Poetry that does not have a regular meter or rhyme scheme. Example: Carl Sandburg’s "Fog".
- Genre: Categorization of literature based on content, form, or style. Example: Fantasy for The Lord of the Rings.
- Homophone: Words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings. Example: "The knight rode into the night".
- Hubris: Excessive pride that leads to a character's downfall. Example: Oedipus’s arrogance in Oedipus Rex.
- Hyperbole: Bold overstatement or extravagant exaggeration for effect. Example: "I had to wait... an eternity".
- Hypophora: Raising a rhetorical question and immediately answering it to emphasize a point. Example: "Why is education important? Because it is the key...".
- Idyll: A poem or scene depicting peaceful, idealized rural life. Example: Descriptions of cattle grazing lazily in a meadow.
- Imagery: Vivid descriptive language that appeals to the five senses. Example: The detailed smell of hay and manure in Charlotte’s Web.
- In medias res: Beginning a narrative in the middle of the action. Example: The Iliad beginning during the Trojan War.
- Irony: Contrast between appearance and reality or intended and literal meaning. Example: Mr. Darcy stating Elizabeth is "not handsome enough to tempt me" when he eventually falls for her.
- Juxtaposition: Placing two or more elements side by side to emphasize differences or similarities. Example: "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times".
- Litotes: A form of understatement that asserts an affirmative by negating its contrary. Example: Saying "not bad" to mean something is good.
- Malapropism: The humorous misuse of a word by confusing it with a similar-sounding one. Example: "He is the pineapple of politeness" instead of "pinnacle".
- Metalepsis: A complex or indirect reference often linking distant ideas to create wit or depth. Example: "Catch the worm tomorrow" referencing "The early bird catches the worm".
- Metaphor: A comparison that describes one thing as if it were another, without using "like" or "as". Example: "All the world’s a stage".
- Metonymy: Replacing the name of something with a related concept or object. Example: Referring to the monarchy as "the crown".
- Mood: The emotional response or atmosphere an author targets in a work. Example: The scary and ominous atmosphere in Dracula.
- Motif: A recurring element or symbol that holds conceptual meaning in a story. Example: Lady Macbeth’s obsession with washing her hands (symbolizing guilt).
- Onomatopoeia: Words that imitate the natural sounds of a thing. Example: "Buzz," "rattle," or "bang".
- Oxymoron: A figure of speech that combines two contradictory terms for poetic effect. Example: "Bittersweet".
- Palindrome: A word, phrase, or sequence that reads the same backward as forward. Example: "A man, a plan, a canal, Panama!".
- Parable: A simple story used to illustrate a moral or spiritual lesson. Example: Tolstoy’s "How Much Land Does a Man Need?".
- Paradox: A statement that appears contradictory but contains a hidden truth. Example: "I know only one thing, and that is I know nothing".
- Parallelism: Using similar grammatical structures or word patterns to create rhythm and balance. Example: "Like father, like son".
- Parody: An imitation of a work or style for humorous or satirical effect. Example: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.
- Pathetic Fallacy: Attributing human emotions to inanimate natural objects. Example: "The storm raged on" reflecting a character's internal fury.
- Pathos: An appeal to the audience’s emotions, particularly pity or sorrow. Example: The decision to shoot Lennie in Of Mice and Men.
- Personification: Metaphorically attributing human characteristics to nonhuman things. Example: "The heart wants what it wants".
- Polyptoton: Repeating words derived from the same root but with different forms. Example: "Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds".
- Polysyndeton: The deliberate use of multiple conjunctions in succession for emphasis. Example: "I laughed and talked and danced and sang".
- Portmanteau: A word formed by combining two or more existing words. Example: Motel (motor + hotel) or blog (web + log).
- Prologue: An introductory section of a literary work that provides background or context. Example: The opening lines of Romeo and Juliet.
- Protagonist: The central character in a narrative who drives the plot. Example: Harry Potter.
- Puns: A play on words based on multiple meanings or similar sounds. Example: "Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana".
- Red Herring: A false lead used to mislead or distract the audience from the real issue. Example: The convict on the moors in The Hound of the Baskervilles.
- Rhetorical Question: A question asked to make a point rather than elicit an answer. Example: "Isn’t it obvious that kindness makes the world a better place?".
- Sarcasm: The use of irony to mock or convey contempt. Example: Mr. Bennet's respect for his wife's "nerves" in Pride and Prejudice.
- Satire: Using irony, parody, and exaggeration to criticize societal faults. Example: Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels.
- Simile: A explicit comparison between two things using "like" or "as". Example: "Her smile was as bright as the sun".
- Soliloquy: A character speaking their inner thoughts aloud while alone on stage. Example: "To be, or not to be" in Hamlet.
- Stream of Consciousness: A narrative mode that portrays the continuous flow of thoughts and feelings in a character's mind. Example: The unstructured mental progression seen in Ulysses.
- Syllogism: A logical argument where a conclusion is drawn from two premises. Example: All humans are mortal; Socrates is human; therefore, Socrates is mortal.
- Symbolism: When an object, person, or action represents a deeper abstract concept. Example: Sauron’s ring representing corruption and evil.
- Syntax: The arrangement of words and phrases to create well-formed sentences. Example: The rhythmic opening of A Tale of Two Cities.
- Tautology: Repetitive use of words with similar meanings for emphasis. Example: "Completely and utterly unique".
- Theme: The central idea or underlying message of a creative work. Example: The exploration of life and death in Charlotte’s Web.
- Tone: The author’s attitude toward their subject matter. Example: The angsty and sardonic tone in The Catcher in the Rye.
- Tragic Flaw (Hamartia): A character defect that leads to the protagonist's downfall in a tragedy. Example: Victor Frankenstein’s obsessive curiosity.
27 May, 2026
Literary Devices in English Literature
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