American Literature Vocabulary for Unit 1: Dreams Test Date: __________

Note: some of these terms will be defined in your textbook; otherwise will be defined in class. Pay attention, begin studying these early on, and do the homework for review.

Slave narrative

Sensory details

Anecdotes

Countenance

Consternation

Pestilential

Copious

Scruple

Nominal

Argument

Claim

Support

Counterargument

Preamble

Declaration

Conclusion

Ethos

Pathos

Logos

Impel

Unalienable/inalienable

Usurpation

Despotism

Arbitrary

Abdicate

Mercenary

Perfidy

Redress

Rectitude

Free verse

Cataloguing

Repetition

Parallelism

Tone

Rhythm

Refrain

Speaker

Character traits

Character’s motivation

Protagonist

Antagonist

Blatantly

Camaraderie

Flux

Mundane

Patrimony

Petulance

Precarious

Precipitate

Retinue

Surfeit

Summary

Response

Analysis

Anaphora

Internal conflict

External conflict

Simile

Metaphor

Allusion

Speech

Audience

Proclamation

Form

Diction

This particular unit will address the following selections and authors:

“Declaration of Independence” by Thomas Jefferson (234-242)

“Gettysburg Address” and “Emancipation Proclamation” by Abraham Lincoln (562-8)

“The Interesting Narrative…” by Olaudah Equiano (78-85)

“Life for My Child is Simple” by Gwendolyn Brooks (1230)

“Winter Dreams” by F. Scott Fitzgerald (936-960)

“I Hear America Singing” by Walt Whitman (508)

“I, Too” by Langston Hughes (843)