A hero is brought down by his/her own flaws, usually by ordinary human flaws – flaws like greed, over-ambition, or even an excess of love, honor, or loyalty.
The language used by the people of a specific area, class, or district.
Language used by poets, novelists and other writers to create images in the mind of the reader.
The main character of a story.
The villain, or bad guy in a story.
The combination of consistently copied consonants.
Two contradicting meanings of the same situation, event, image, sentence, phrase, or story.
An understatement in which a positive statement is expressed by negating its opposite.
The placement of two or more things side by side, often in order to bring out their differences.
A literary device that uses multiple repetitions of the same conjunction (and, but, if, etc), most commonly the word “and.”
The very end of a story, the part where all the different plot lines are finally tied up and all remaining questions answered.
The framework that underlies the order and manner in which a narrative is presented to a reader.
Gives the audience hints or signs about the future.