Literary Devices 2
Literary Devices 2
Literary Devices 2
Alliteration: The repetition of the beginning sound in two or more words in a line of
verse.
Complexity of Characterization:
Writer plays upon your emotions either to persuade you to one character’s
side or to make it difficult to definitely side with one over the other. The
writer manipulates the reader into deciding who is the protagonist and
antagonist or makes it difficult for the reader to come to a conclusive
answer on that issue.
Connotation: The associations that come with a word other than its meaning.
Ex: The connotation of “yacht” is wealth and glamour.
Consonance: The repetition of consonant sounds in the middle or at the end of words.
(Spies hiss in the stillness.)
Imagery: Sensory details that enable the reader to see, hear, touch, taste and/or smell
whatever is being described.
Ex: “The whiskey on your breath
Could make a small boy dizzy.”
(“My Papa’s Waltz” by Theodore Roethke)
The desired effect of metaphors, similes, personification, etc. When a
writer uses one or more of the literary devices to “paint a picture” in the
mind of the reader.
Irony (Regular): When the reader expects one thing to happen, but the opposite occurs.
Dramatic Irony: When a character believes something to be true, but the reader/audience
knows the character is wrong. The reader/audience really knows the
truth.
Irony of Situation: When a character in a piece of literature expects one thing to happen,
but the opposite occurs.
Verbal Irony: When an author uses a word or a phrase that is the opposite of what s/he
means.
Ex: “my friend” in “Dulce et Decorum Est.”
Type 1—Both the literal and the figurative types are specifically named.
Type 4—RARE! Neither the literal nor the figurative term is named.
Ex: It sifts from leaden sieves.
Snow=literal term
Flour, sugar=figurative term implied
Rhyme: The similarity or likeness of sound existing between two words. A true
rhyme should consist of identical sounding syllables that are stressed and
the letters preceding the vowel sounds should be different. Thus fun and
run are true to perfect rhymes because the vowel sounds are identical
preceded by different consonants.
Symbolism: A symbol may be said to have two separate meanings: literal and
figurative.
Ex: A rectangular flag with red and white stripes and a field of 50 stars on
a blue background is the U.S. flag literally.
The same flag stands for or symbolizes liberty, freedom and democracy,
figuratively.