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Creative Writing Final Exam Study Guide. 1. Acrostic. a p oem or a series of lines in which certain letters, for example, the first, form a name or motto. 2. Alliteration. repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words. 3. Allusion.
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1. Acrostic • a poem or a series of lines in which certain letters, for example, the first, form a name or motto.
2. Alliteration • repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words
3. Allusion • a reference in a literary work to a well-known character, phrase, or situation from history
4. Anecdote • a short written or oral account of an event from a person’s life.
5. antagonist • the character in contrast or opposition to the main character
6. autobiography • a person’s account of his or her life.
7. biography • a nonfiction account of a person’s life written by another person
8. brainstorming • a technique to generate ideas in which the person writes down ideas as quickly as possible without judging the ideas
9. character • an individual in a literary work.
10. characterization • Method of revealing a character’s personality
11. direct characterization • The writer makes explicit statements about the character; the character is revealed through his or her own actions, words, thoughts, reactions, and beliefs
12. indirect characterization • The writer reveals a character through the reactions, thoughts, words, and beliefs ofother characters
13. chronological order • the ordering of events according to time
14. climax • The point of the greatest emotional intensity, interest, or suspense in the plot of the literary work; the highest point in a story
15. conflict • The struggle between opposing forces in a story or drama.
16. internal conflict • A struggle that takes place within the mind of a character who is torn between opposing feelings or goals; man vs. self
17. external conflict • exists when a character struggles against some outside force, such as another person, nature, society, or fate; three types: • man vs. man • man vs. nature • man vs. society
18. denouement • the resolution (outcome) of a story.
19. diamante • A diamond shaped poem focused on opposites.
20. diary • A personal record of experiences, events, and observations.
21. dynamic • A descriptive word for a character who changes
22. expository • The explanation of a subject; a mode of writing whose purpose is to inform or to explain
23. falling action • the action or events that follow the climax
24. flat • a character who reveals only one personality trait; predictions cannot be made about this type of character
25. formula poetry • a formula or fixed pattern dictates the form, structure, and/or content of a poem
26. free writing • writing nonstop for a set time, usually only five or ten minutes; the idea is to get your thoughts on paper; it can begin anywhere and go anywhere; the purpose is to help you get started or free your mind
27. free verse • poetry that has no fixed pattern of meter, rhyme, line length, or stanza arrangement
28. haiku • a type of poetry characterized by the following : three lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables; originated in Japan; traditional topic is nature
29. essay • a writing attempt on a topic; a short work of nonfiction on a single topic
30. exposition • introduces the story’s characters, setting, and situation. • background information
31. hook • that which gets the reader’s attention at the beginning of any piece of writing
32. imagery • descriptive writing that appeals to one or more of the 5 senses; writing that paints a picture
33. limerick • a short poem fitting the following formula: • lines 1, 2, and 5 rhyme (longer). • lines 3, and 4 rhyme (shorter). • The limerick is usually humorous.
34. journal • a daily record of events kept by a participant in those events or a witness to them; not meant to be a private document
35. fable • a short story with animal characters that teaches a lesson
36. simile • a comparison between two seemingly unlike things using like or as
37.metaphor • a comparison between two seemingly unlike things not using like or as; a DIRECT comparison
38. mood • the feeling or atmosphere that a writer creates
39. narrative • a piece of writing or speech that tells a story; driven by a conflict or problem, a narrative unfolds event by event and leads to a resolution
40. onomatopoeia • Use of a word or phrase that imitates or suggests the sound of what it describes
41. organizational patterns of writing (5) Method for organizing a piece of writing • Chronological (time) • Spatial (space) • Problem-solution • Sequential (sequence of events; order) • Cause-effect
42. paragraph • a unit of writing that consists of related sentences
43. sequential order • A method of organization which relies on the sequence (order) of events
44. point of view • the perspective from which the story is told
45. first person The narrator is a character in the story and is referred to as “I.” The reader sees everything through the eyes of the narrator.
46. Third-person limited • The narrator reveals the thoughts, feelings, and observations o f only one character, referring to that character as “he”, or “she.”
47. Third-person omniscient • All-knowing point of view; the narrator is not a character in the story but rather is someone who stands outside the story and comments on the action. A third-person omniscient narrator knows everything about the characters and the events and may reveal details that the characters could not themselves reveal.
48. Plot diagram • _/\_ (c) • / (b) / \ (d) • / \ • _______ _________ • (a) (e) • (a) exposition (d) falling action • (b) rising action (e) resolution/ (c) climax denouement
49. protagonist • The main character in the story; hero