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Match each vocabulary word to its correct definition.(20 points)
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Diction
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Setting
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Connotation
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Archetype
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Symbolism
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Imagery
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Central Idea
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Rhetoric
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Rhetorical Device
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Logos
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Theme
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Hyperbole
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Pathos
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Juxtaposition
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Narrative Techniques
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Context
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Ethos
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Personification
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Characterization
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Conflict
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All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Diction — The author’s choice of words and style of expression.

Setting — The time, place, and social/environmental context in which a story occurs.

Connotation — The emotional or cultural associations and implied meanings of a word beyond its literal definition.

Archetype — A recurring universal symbol, pattern, or character type found across literature and cultures.

Symbolism — The use of objects, characters, or events to represent larger ideas or concepts.

Imagery — Descriptive language that appeals to the senses to create mental pictures.

Central Idea — The primary point, main message, or most important concept of a text.

Rhetoric — The art and study of effective or persuasive speaking and writing.

Rhetorical Device — A specific technique (e.g., metaphor, repetition, rhetorical question) used to persuade or create effect.

Logos — An appeal to logic or reason, using facts, data, and rational argument.

Theme — The underlying message, insight, or moral about life conveyed by a literary work.

Hyperbole — Deliberate and obvious exaggeration used for emphasis or effect.

Pathos — An appeal to the audience’s emotions.

Juxtaposition — Placing two or more ideas, characters, actions, or items side by side to contrast or compare them.

Narrative Techniques — Methods authors use to tell a story (e.g., point of view, pacing, flashback, dialogue).

Context — The circumstances, background, or situation surrounding an event, statement, or text that help explain its meaning.

Ethos — An appeal based on the speaker’s credibility, authority, or ethical character.

Personification — Attributing human qualities or actions to non-human things or abstract ideas.

Characterization — The techniques an author uses to develop and reveal a character’s personality (direct and indirect).

Conflict — The struggle between opposing forces (internal or external) that drives the plot.