front 1 Irony | back 1 the opposite of what is expected occurs |
front 2 Dramatic Irony | back 2 when the audience knows something the characters don't, creating tension, suspense, or humor |
front 3 Situational Irony: | back 3 when the outcome of a situation is contrary to what was intended or desired |
front 4 Verbal Irony | back 4 : a person says one thing but means another |
front 5 Satire | back 5 uses exaggeration, humor, irony, or ridicule to highlight the flaws and absurdities of people and society |
front 6 First Person Point of View | back 6 the narrator is a person in the story, telling the story from their own point of view |
front 7 Third Person Limited: | back 7 the story is presented from a single character’s perspective |
front 8 Third Person Omniscient: | back 8 an all-knowing narrator reveals the thoughts, feelings, & actions of any character in the story |
front 9 Theme | back 9 the main message or lesson about life that the author wants readers to understand |
front 10 Motif | back 10 a repeated image, word, idea, or action in a story that helps show or support the theme; something that keeps showing up to remind readers of an important message or idea. |
front 11 Symbol | back 11 is something—a person, object, color, or event—that stands for a bigger idea or meaning in a story |
front 12 Allegory | back 12 a story in which the characters, events, and settings all stand for bigger ideas or messages |
front 13 Abstract | back 13 something that you can’t see or touch but can think about or feel—like love, hope, or fear |