Unit Four - Glossary of Literary and Rhetorical Terms AP Language and Composition

This week you are responsible for all of the terms that begin with the letters I, L, M, N, and O.

1. Image

A word or words, either figurative or literal, used to describe a sensory experience or an object perceived by the senses. An image is always a concrete representation.

2. Imagery

The use of images, especially in a pattern of related images. often figurative, to create a strong, unified sensory impression.

3. Inversion

Variation of the normal word order (subject first, then verb, then complement) which puts a modifier or the verb as first in the sentence. The element that appears first is emphasized more than the subject.

4. Irony

When a reader is aware of a reality that differs from a character's perception of reality (dramatic irony). The literal meaning of a writer's words may be verbal irony.

5. Logic

An implied comparison resulting when one thing is directly called another. To be logically acceptable, support must be appropriate to the claim, believable and consistent.

6. Metaphor

A comparison of two things, often unrelated. A figurative verbal equation results where both "parts illuminate one another." I.A. Richards called the literal term in a metaphor the "tenor" and the figurative term the "vehicle."

7. Mood

An atmosphere created by a writer's word choice (diction) and the details selected. Syntax is also a determiner of mood because sentence strength, length, and complexity affect pacing.

8. Moral

The lesson drawn from a fictional or nonfictional story. A heavily didactic story.

9. Negative-positive

Sentence that begins by stating what is not true, then ending by stating what is true.

10. Non-sequitur

Latin for "it does nor follow." When one statement isn't logically connected to another

11. Objectivity

A writer's attempt to remove himself or herself from any subjective, personal involvement in a story. Hard news journalism is frequently prized for its objectivity, although even fictional stories can be told without a writer rendering personal judgment.

12. Onomatopoeia

The use of a word whose pronunciation suggests its meaning. "Buzz," "hiss," "slam," and "pop" are frequently used examples.

13. Oversimplification

When a writer obscures or denies the complexity of the issues in an argument.

14. Oxymoron

A rhetorical antithesis. Juxtaposing two contradictory terms, like "wise fool" or "eloquent silence."