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| A brief story to teach a lesson. |
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| actions that immediately follow the climax, a kind of "cleaning up". |
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| prose narrative which is invented by the writer. |
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| language used for descriptive effect; often inspires ideas indirectly. |
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| clues to prepare the reader for events that will happen. |
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| ideas created in the reader's mind by the author's words. |
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| collection of sense details which helps the reader to connect with the writing. |
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| contrast between reality and what seems real. |
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| words mean nothing more than what they actually say. |
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| writing that uses specific details to present a region. |
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| comparison of two unlike things. |
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| regular pattern of syllables that gives poetry a predictable rhythm. |
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| emotional quality of a story. |
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| lesson on right and wrong. |
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| writing or speech which tells a story. |
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| point in the story which catches reader's attention by presenting a problem or situation. |
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| person who tells a story. |
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| extended fictional prose writing. |
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| a word that imitates the sound it describes. |
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| when an object, animal, or idea is given human form or characteristic. |
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