AP Language and Composition / Tropes and Schemes from JFK For the following sentences from John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address‚ please identify whether you think the sentence uses a trope (artful diction) or a scheme (interesting sentence structure) by checking the appropriate box. We will then work together using our glossary of rhetorical terms to identify the name of the trope or scheme. Example Trope Scheme Name of Trope/Scheme 1 “To those old allies…To those new states…To those people
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Gary Soto’s autobiographical narrative “A Summer Life” recreates the feeling of guilt Sota felt after stealing an apple pie. The feeling is recreated through the use of allusions‚ imagery‚ and lively diction. Throughout the narrative many allusions are present. One of the most prevalent is the allusion to God. Sota refers to God several times to demonstrate he was a religious child. This also shows the he knows the severity of his sin‚ and consequences for it. Another allusion Soto uses is to Adam
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Poets employ language techniques to influence and manipulate the emotions of their readers. Wilfred Owen creatively and successfully paints a picture for his audience about the battling lives of young soldiers who were lured into joining World War One. His poems deliver the fears‚ the courage and the manipulation of World War One experiences through themes such as loss of identity‚ brutality of war‚ repo cautions of war‚ reality of war‚ sense of sacrifice and dehumanisation. Wilfred Owen employs
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Life is merely a journey. On a journey‚ an individual experiences a range of obstacles‚ either expected or unexpected‚ which shapes their life. Such obstacles initiate the process of change and transformation. Clearly‚ through a close study of the play ‘Away’ by Michael Gow‚ the poem ‘Whither will I Wander’ by William Shakespeare and the picture book ‘I had trouble in getting to Solla Sollew’ by Dr Seuss‚ the characters experience various degrees of change and transformation. Factors that impact
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Chapter 6 Vocab terms: * Spartan – sternly disciplined and rigorously simple‚ frugal‚ or austere. ”The room was so spartan there was no place to hide the pouch except under his clothes.” * Shalwar - loose‚ pajamalike trousers worn by both men and women in India and southeast Asia. “You are the rich man?” he asked‚ looking doubtfully at Mortenson’s frayed running shoes and worn mud-colored shalwar.” * Juddered - to vibrate violently “And as they juddered over potholes at hundred
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Idea and Explanation Example Quotes Techniques Appearance vs Reality Approx4 2per e.g. List act scene line 2per e.g. Richard III- Richard‚ himself is very aware of the gap between his outwards reality and inward reality. As a consequence he carefully constructs his façade while fully acknowledging his Machiavellian motivations to the audience in his asides. Clarence going to prison and Richard says he will try to get him out but doesn’t do it. The ghosts visits
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Analyse how language used intensified the message of the written text(s). In both poem ‘Does it Matter?’ and ‘Survivors’ the poet‚ Siegfried Sassoon is able to intensify the message of the non-combatants misunderstanding of the realities of war. This was by Sassoon using different language techniques such as rhetorical question‚ repetition and onomatopoeia. Rhetorical question is used to intensify the message of the non-combatants misunderstanding of the realities of war in the poem ‘Does it
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In the story The Veldt‚ Ray Bradbury uses imagery and personification to better illustrate the effects of neglecting children have. During the story‚ Bradbury uses imagery to better help the reader understand what lifestyle the children don’t want to leave. Even though houses like the “Happylife Home” don’t really exist yet‚ the imagery helps the reader picture what it would be like to live in a house like that. Others say that a craft more used during the story would be similes and metaphors. While
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Figurative Language is also called figures of speech. It changes the literal meaning of words • to express complexity‚ • to capture a physical or sensory effect‚ or • to extend meaning. There are a number of figures of speech. Some of the more common ones Simile Making a comparison between unlike things‚ using “like” or “as.” Forrest Gump’s famous simile is “Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna Metaphor Making a comparison between unlike things without the use “like”
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FIGURES OF SPEECH: literary resources used to provide vividness‚ intensity and beauty to poetry and prose.” RESEMBLANCE METAPHOR: transfers attributes from one object to another‚ identifies. The bishop was a pillar of the church (pillar=strength : bishop= strength) He was a very serpent on my path (serpent= evil‚ danger: he=evil‚ danger) SIMILE: compares two things to clarify the meaning of one of them by using “as” or “like” to link them The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold
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