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| a variety of language distinct from the standard of variety in pronunciation, grammar, or vocab |
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| conversation between characters |
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| author's choice of words, phase, sentence structure, and figurative language |
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| to distinguish, tell apart |
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| genre of literature represented by works for stage |
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| written text of a play, includes dialogue and stage directions |
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| to make a judgement based on reasoning |
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| traits that mark a work as imaginative |
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| traits that mark a work as reportorial |
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| to examine or judge carefully |
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| a narrative device that provides necessary background info to a story |
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| piece of info that is true |
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| part of literary plot that ischaracterized by diminishing tensions |
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| any story that uses imagination instead of facts |
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| language that cannot be takeenFigurative Language |
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| language that cannot be taken literally |
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| the point of view from which a story is written |
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