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Tuesday 16 February 2016

defination of the term Anachronis with example

meaning of ANACHRONISM with example

Defination of Anachronism

An item or person that is “out of place” in relation to a time period. One type, parachronism, occurs when an object from ages past is inserted into a future time frame. Example: In a certain short-short story, an aba- cus is used in computer programming. A second type, prochronism, occurs when an object from the present or future appears in a historical setting.



Example

: In a novel about World War I, soldiers would listen to iPods in the trenches.
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Figurative language in literature with examples


Figurative Language
Descriptive language used to make comparisons and to employ the reader’s own imagination.

Example: See simile, metaphor, and personification.


Rhetoric
Carefully chosen words and phrases that combine to achieve artful and effective communication and even persuasion. Example: A political campaign speech.

Semantics
The study of meaning through signs, symbols, and words and how a person interprets these. Example: The sense and manner in which ideas are conveyed are both part of the semantics involved in communica- tion.

Style
The characteristic and often perfected manner of writ- ing by any given novelist, poet, or dramatist. Exam- ple: Hemingway’s taut, disciplined, journalistic style came to identify and characterize all of his work as a writer.
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Full defination of Irony and type of irony with example

Full defination of Irony and type of irony with example

Irony
A literary device in which action or language stands in contrast to what appears to be true or expected. Exam- ple: “Dr. Fujii hardly had time to think that he was dy- ing before he realized that he was alive...” (11). From John Hersey’s Hiroshima.

Types of Irony

Cosmic Irony


A literary device that contrasts what a character attempts to become and what actually happens, due to forces of the universe. Example: When protagonist Henry in Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage thinks he has survived he instead is suddenly “war” confronted with the true attack or
second assault.



Dramatic Irony
Also called Tragic Irony, this occurs when what a character says or believes contradicts what the audience knows to be true. In these circumstances, a character’s words and actions have one meaning for the character and an en- tirely different meaning for the audience. Ex- ample: In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, when John Proctor “forgets” the specific Command- ment against adultery, his audience senses the dramatic irony of his Freudian omission.

Situational Irony
A literary device in which the expected action and the actual action are in direct contrast, usu- ally due to forces out of the control of the char- acters. Example: Some of the situations that occur with Willie Loman in Miller’s Death of a Salesman are, lamentably, ironic.

Structural Irony
This occurs when a naïve protagonist holds a view or outlook that differs from the one the author holds. The reader will usually feel intel- lectually superior to the protagonist, and em- pathy for the hero often suffers. Example: In Gulliver’s Travels, Swift uses structural irony effectively when his naïve narrator relates tales and judgments of people whom he encounters through the skewed lens of conservative moral- ity/pride.


Verbal Irony
A figure of speech in which a character says one thing but actually means the opposite. Sar- casm often falls into the classification of verbal irony. Example: When Hamlet says, “I am too much i’ the sun,” he is using both a pun (sun/son) and verbal irony.


Melodrama
A drama of any type that relies on stereotypes or two- dimensional characters whom the audience recognizes.
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