stylistic features accumulation Häufung Call it luck!heart!love
Transcription
stylistic features accumulation Häufung Call it luck!heart!love
stylistic features accumulation alliteration anaphora chiasm comparision ellipsis enjambment euphemism exaggeration hyperbole image imagery litotes metaphor onomatopoeia oxymoron repetition rhetorical question understatement Häufung Alliteration Anapher Chiasmus Vergleich Ellipse Enjambment Beschönigung Übertreibung starke Übertreibung Bild Bildersprache Litotes Metapher Klangmalerei Oxymoron Wiederholung rhetorische Frage Untertreibung Call it luck!heart!love! Milk makes men mad. He does not…, he does.. “sentence-crossing” run-on-line I’m so beautiful. She didn’t look bad. loud silence point of view disguised narrator I-narrator omniscient narrator personal narrator third-person-narrator unpersönlicher Erzähler ich-Erzähler allwissender Erzähler ich-Erzähler er-Erzähler rhythm (fairly regular succession of stressed and unstressed syllables) iamb XX Jambus XX (easy, happy) Trochäus trochee Perhaps owing to its simplicity, though, trochaic meter is fairly common in children's rhymes: Peter, Peter pumpkin-eater Had a wife and couldn't keep her. Twinkle, twinkle, little star How I wonder what you are. anapaest XXX Anapäst anapaest can produce a very rolling, galloping feeling verse, and allows for long lines with a great deal of internal complexity dactyl iambic XXX Daktylus jambisch trochaic trochäisch rhyme scheme alternate/ crossing rhyme enclosed rhyme imperfect rhyme abab abba abcebad analysis ambiguity ambiguous anticipation apart climax contrast delineation denotation estrangement flashback gradation ironic irony meaning order paragraph sarcasm sarcastic substance suspense tension theme topic statement intetion remark result contradiction inadequat connection evidence quotation/ quote criticism euphemism Mehrdeutigkeit mehrdeutig Vorwegnahme getrennt Höhepunkt Kontrast Schilderung Bedeutung Verfremdung Rückblende Steigerung ironisch Ironie Bedeutung Aufbau Paragraph Sarkasmus sarkastisch Inhalt Spannung Spannung Inhalt Überschrift Aussage Absicht Bemerkung Ergebnis Widerspruch nicht ausreichend Verbindung Beweis Zitat Kritik Beschönigung Kreuzreim umschließender Reim unreiner Reim abbreviations (Abkürzungen) eg cf l/ll example given confer line/s zum Beispiel vergleiche Zeile/n punctuation (Satzzeichen) / . : ? ! , ; dash slash full stop colon quotation mark exclamation mark comma semicolon text forms essay novel newspaper report shortstory Erläuterung Roman Zeitungsartikel Kurzgeschichte texttypes instructive tt narrative tt descriptive tt expository argumentative tt Anleitung Erzählung Beschreibung Erklärung Argumentation language register formal style neutral style informal style - slang (sl) - vulgar (vulg) difficult vocabulary, serious, often Latin words, essays/ academic publications used by educated people, feature stories/ news stories… simple sentences, short forms (can’t/ you’ll), colloquial, between friends, relaxed dialogs between people of the same age/ background taboo words, four-letter-words, to shock the reader vocabulary (vocab) derogatory words (derog) compound words sophisticated words abfällig, negativ zusammengesetzt intellektuell, positiv “show-off” (Angeber) “policeman”, “pullover” rhyme A rhyme is a repetition of identical or similar sounds in two or more different words and is most often used in poetry. The word "rhyme" may also refer to a complete rhyming couplet or short poem that uses verses (see nursery rhyme). The concept of rhyme and its role in poetry vary considerably in different cultures. In modern English, and most European literary traditions, it is the final vowel/consonant combination found at the ends of lines that are repeated across the rhyming words. When words within a single line are rhymed, it is called an internal rhyme. Categories of rhyme include: • • • tail rhyme (or end): a rhyme in the final syllable(s) of a verse (the most common kind) o masculine: a rhyme in which the stress is on the final syllable of the words. (rhyme, sublime, crime) o feminine: a rhyme in which the stress is on the penultimate (second from last) syllable of the words. (picky, tricky, sticky) o dactylic: a rhyme in which the stress is on the antepenultimate (third from last) syllable (hesitant, president) o triple: a rhyme in which all three syllables of a three-syllable word are stressed equally. o perfect: a rhyme between words that are identical in sound from the point of their first accented syllable forward. (sight and flight, deign and gain and quatrain) o imperfect: a rhyme between a stressed and an unstressed syllable. (den, siren) o identity: a rhyme that starts at a consonant instead of a vowel, or rhyming a word with itself. (gun, begun) o semirhyme: a rhyme with an extra syllable on one word. (bend, ending) oblique (or slant): a rhyme with an imperfect match in sound. o sight (or eye): a similarity in spelling but not in sound. (cough, bough, or love, move) consonance: matching consonants. (her, dark) o half rhyme (or sprung rhyme) is consonance on the final consonants of the words involved assonance: matching vowels. (shake, hate) A rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhyming lines in a poem.