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Column A 1. third person omniscient narrator: third person omniscient narrator 2. dramatic irony: dramatic irony 3. foreshadowing: foreshadowing 4. situational irony: situational irony 5. unreliable narrator: unreliable narrator 6. verbal irony: verbal irony 7. allusion: allusion Column B a. In Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” Romeo says he prefers to die sooner than live without Juliet’s love: “Life were better ended by their hate, Than death prorogued, wanting of thy love” b. In the movie "Ghost," a woman is grieving after her boyfriend was murdered in a robbery. She cries on his friend's shoulder, not knowing that it was his friend that set her boyfriend up. The audience knows, but she doesn't. c. A narrator who is biased or does not have all the information. d. Making reference to something that a person would have to already be familiar with to understand. e. When the person who is telling the story seems to be "all knowing and all seeing" f. In Beauty and the Beast, an animated Disney movie, Belle refuses to marry Gaston by saying "I just don't deserve you!" g. In the short story "The Necklace," a woman borrows a diamond necklace from a friend to wear to a party. She loses the necklace and spends the next ten years working to pay back the money that she borrowed to replace it. After the money is all payed back, she learns that the diamonds were not even real in the first place.

User Sventies
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1 Answer

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1. Third person omniscient narrator - E( the person seems to "know and see" all.

2. Dramatic irony - B ( the audience knows more about the situations)

3. Foreshadowing - A (helps reader expect futute events in the story)

4. Situational irony - G ( creates an unexpected turn at the end of the story)

5. Unreliable narrator - C (they don't have all the information)

6. Verbal irony - F (speaker mentions something contraditory)

7 - Allusion - D (makes reader to think of a particular thing or person)



User Alex Ross
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