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Syntax

Terms Definition 1. a person or thing that is the direct opposite of someone or something else 2. a contrast or opposition between two things Student

Antithesis

Jamie Guzman

Balanced sentence Coherence Compoundcomplex Inverted sentence

A sentence made up of two parts that are roughly equal in length, importance, and grammatical structure: a paired construction logical or natural connection or consistency a sentence that consists of at least two independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses is when the predicate/verb comes before the subject/noun. This is done to emphasize the verb more

Lora Arino

Alisha Nueva

Arianne Tala

Louis Dulana

Fiction
Term Definition
is a type of narrative writing that explains the point of authors. Anecdote also uses for help readers to visualize the setting of the story. Anecdote includes a define point, setting, characters and dialogue. Anecdote also does not exist itself, but it come a longs with arguments and expository essay. Loose sentence is also called a cumulative sentence. It is the type of sentence forms with series of subordinate constructions. It explains the characters, places, events and ideas

Student

Anecdote

Sohyun Stella Bae

Anticlimax

a drop, often sudden and unexpected, from a dignified or important idea or situation to a trivial one or a descent from something sublime to something ridiculous. In fiction and drama, this refers to action which is disappointing in contrast to the previous moment of intense interest or anything which follows the climax. The effect may be comic and is often intended to be. According to Samuel Johnson, who first recorded the word, it is A sentence in which the last part expresses something lower than the first. (noun) A character is a person who is responsible for the thoughts and actions within a story, poem, or other literature. Caractere from Old French (n.) Something that occurs casually in connection with something else the psychological grounds for a character's behavior also called omniscient point of view; a perspective that can be seen from one characters view, then anothers, then anothers describes how the story is conveyed The position of the narrator in relation to the story. Types of POV include first person, third person, omniscient, and objective. (n.) 1:The grammatical category of forms that designate a speaker or writer referring to himself or herself. 2:A discourse or literary style in which the narrator recounts his or her own experiences or impressions. 3:A perspective in a video or computer game that shows only what a character would see. The objective point of view presents the action and the characters' speech, without comment or emotion. The reader has to interpret them and uncover their meaning Point of View: the perspective from which the story is told. The omniscient narrator knows everything, may reveal the motivations, thoughts and feelings of the characters, and gives the reader information. With a limited omniscient narrator, the material is presented from the point of view of a character, in third person
Third person limited point of view is a method of storytelling in which the narrator knows only the thoughts and feelings of a single character,

Yohan Park

Character

Tylah Rabago

Incident Motivation Unlimited Narrative voice Point of View

Janica Bamo Emil Penafiel

Jewel Lagman

Stephanie Abalos

*Simon Tan (1 day late)

First-person Point of View

John Gopez

Objective

Mariel Ruiz

Onmiscient (PoV)

Nari Kim

Limited 3rd person

Al Jerrome Dayo

while other characters are presented only externally. Third person limited grants a writer more freedom than first person, but less than third person omniscient.

Subplot

Theme

Third-person point of view

Stream of Consciousness

noun a secondary or subordinate plot, as in a play, novel, or other literary work; underplot A theme is a lesson learned, like the hidden message or point the author is trying to get across in writing. There may be more than one theme in a novel, play, or movie, but usually there is an overriding main theme that sort of ties all the aspects of the story together. The third person point of view is a form of storytelling in which a narrator relates all action in third person, using third person pronouns such as "he" or "she." Third person point of view may be omniscient or limited. Often new writers feel most comfortable with first person, but writing in the third person allows a writer more freedom in how a story is told refers to the flow of thoughts, memories, feelings, and senseperceptions through one's mind.

Aria Perez-Theisen

Jenelle Rabago

Bryant Santos

*Zachary Flores (1 day late)

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