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| the sequence of related events that make a story hang together |
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| next part on the plot, causes new problems |
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| the story's most exciting or suspensefil moment; when something nappens that decides the outcome of the conflict |
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| last part of plot, when the problems are resolved and the story ends |
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| you visit a character's future |
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| when the present sction in a story is interrupted with a scene or scenes from the past |
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| another method for manipulating time; a writer plants clues that hint at something that will happen later in the plot |
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| the reason why something happened |
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| the result of some event or action |
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| put it all together so that you can better understanf the subject |
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| time and place of a story or play |
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| a story's atmosphere or the feeling it evokes |
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| the vantage point from which a writer tells a story |
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| the traditional vantage point |
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| First-person Point of View |
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| Third-person Limited Point of View |
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| the story is told by and outside observer, who frequently refers to charcters with third-person pronouns(he, she, they) |
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| the writer's distinctive use of language in a story |
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| the attitude a speaker or writer takes toward a subject, a character, or the reader |
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| only writing that ridicules the shortcoming of people or institutions in an attempt to bring about a change |
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