Relacionar Columnas Literary TermsVersión en línea Match up these literary devices with their definitions. por Laura Haney 1 Genre 2 First person point-of-view 3 Foreshadowing 4 Flashback 5 Falling action 6 Alliteration 7 Dramatic irony 8 Dynamic character 9 Exposition 10 Figurative language 11 External conflict 12 Flat character 13 Dialect 14 Climax 15 Diction 16 Direct characterization 17 Allusion 18 Antagonist 19 Dialogue 20 Fiction use of literary devices in writing; content not meant to be taken literally beginning of story, giving characters and setting narrated by a character in the story; uses “I” author hints at what is to come a style of speaking specific to a geographical area or group of people turning point in a story (in regard to conflict) a character that changes over the course of the story (personality change) conversation between two or more characters the author or narrator explicitly tells you a character’s qualities the action of a story is interrupted to relate something that happened earlier, then returns to the storyline an author’s choice of words the audience knows more than the characters genre where at least some (if not all) details are conceived by author beginning multiple words with the same consonant (she sells sea shells…) a conflict between two people, a person and nature, a person and the supernatural, or a person and society a reference to a well-known person, place, thing, work of art, historical event, literary work, etc. person or force working against protagonist categories of writing used to sort stories character that has few traits or characteristics part of story leading to resolution