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Literary Terms. “The Lady, or the Tiger?”. “Cask of Amontillado”. Literary Terms. Miscellaneous. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. 500. Question Column 1-100.

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  1. Literary Terms “The Lady, or the Tiger?” “Cask of Amontillado” Literary Terms Miscellaneous 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500

  2. Question Column 1-100 The reflection of a writer’s attitude toward a subject of a piece of literature.

  3. Answer Column 1-100 What is tone?

  4. Question Column 1-200 DAILY DOUBLE What are the two main characters in a story called?

  5. Answer Column 1-200 Protagonist and Antagonist

  6. Question Column 1-300 Hinting at points in the story before it is going to happen.

  7. Answer Column 1-300 foreshadowing

  8. Question Column 1-400 What is the difference between tone and imagery?

  9. Answer Column 1-400 Tone is the attitude an author has towards the literary work. Imagery is the picture you see in your head because the author has used words that appeal to your senses.

  10. Question Column 1-500 What is the difference between direct and indirect characterization?

  11. Answer Column 1-500 Direct characterization is when you find out character traits directly from the narrator where indirect is when you find out character traits through the thoughts of a character, other characters, or actions of characters

  12. Question Column 2-100 Who is the antagonist?

  13. Answer Column 2-100 The princess

  14. Question Column 2-200 Which type of characterization is used here: “Tall, beautiful, fair, his appearance was greeted with a low hum of admiration and anxiety.” (A-24)?

  15. Answer Column 2-200 Direct characterization

  16. Question Column 2-300 Which type of character is the lover? Flat b. Round

  17. Answer Column 2-300 A. Flat

  18. Question Column 2-400 Which point of view is the story written from at the very end? First person Second person Third person limited Third person omniscient

  19. Answer Column 2-400 B. Second person

  20. Question Column 2-500 What does the word “dire” mean? “…and the vast audience, with bowed heads and downcast hearts, wended slowly their homeward way, mourning greatly that one so young and fair, or so old and respected, should have merited so dire a fate” (A-22). Unjustified Unfair Dreadful Justified

  21. Answer Column 2-500 C. Dreadful

  22. Question Column 3-100 Who is the protagonist?

  23. Answer Column 3-100 Montresor

  24. Question Column 3-200 What does the serpent symbolize on the coat of arms? “…the foot crushes a serpent rampant whose fangs are imbedded in the heel” (A-45).

  25. Answer Column 3-200 Evil

  26. DAILY DOUBLEQuestion Column 3-300 What point of view is this story written from? First person Second person Third person limited Third person omniscient

  27. Answer Column 3-300 A. First person

  28. Question Column 3-400 What type of irony is used in these lines? “We will go back; your health is precious” (A-44). Verbal Situational Dramatic

  29. Answer Column 3-400 Verbal

  30. Question Column 3-500 Which literary device is used in this line? “’Be it so,’ I said, replacing the tool beneath the cloak…” (A-45).

  31. Answer Column 3-500 foreshadowing

  32. DAILY DOUBLE Question Column 4-100 The main idea or message of a work

  33. Answer Column 4-100 What is theme?

  34. Question Column 4-200 Time and place

  35. Answer Column 4-200 What is setting?

  36. Question Column 4-300 The writer’s choice of words and the arrangement of those words within a text

  37. Answer Column 4-300 What is diction?

  38. Question Column 4-400 A character who provides a strong contrast to another character

  39. Answer Column 4-400 What is foil character?

  40. Question Column 4-500 What are the five stages of plot sequence?

  41. Answer Column 4-500 Exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution

  42. Question Column 5-100 From “The Bass, the River and Sheila Mant” “As automatically as I brought along my rod, I tied on a big Rapala plug, let it down into the water, let out some line and immediately forgot all about it.”

  43. Answer Column 5-100 foreshadowing

  44. Question Column 5-200 How is the title of the story “The Lottery” ironic and which type of irony is it?

  45. Answer Column 5-200 What is situational? The reader thinks a lottery is a positive event where this one is negative.

  46. Question Column 5-300 What type of irony does this passage include: “It would be interesting to see what it would be like here if you enjoyed scolding me.” (42)?

  47. Answer Column 5-300 Verbal irony

  48. Question Column 5-400 What did the necklace symbolize at the beginning of the story vs. the end?

  49. Answer Column 5-400 Beginning – wealth, power, status, beauty End – poverty, lies, hard work, depression

  50. Question Column 5-500 What is irony? List the three types of irony and give an example of each.

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