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LITERACY DEVICES HELP 10 POINTS!

“Do not underestimate/The Hercules behind your tongue/Your voices are the reasons this planet’s axis is tilted.”
Question 5 options:

allusion

allegory

foreshadowing
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Question 6 (1 point) Question 6 Unsaved
The use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices, particularly in the context of contemporary politics and other topical issues.
Question 6 options:

irony

satire

allegory
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Question 7 (1 point) Question 7 Unsaved
The presentation of material in a work in such a way that later events are prepared for.
Question 7 options:

flashback

foreshadowing

irony
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Question 8 (1 point) Question 8 Unsaved
A device by which a work presents material that occurred prior to the opening scene of the work.

Question 8 options:

flashback

foreshadowing

irony
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Question 9 (1 point) Question 9 Unsaved
A form of extended metaphor in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative are equated with meanings that lie outside the narrative itself.
Question 9 options:

allusion

allegory

foreshadowing
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Question 10 (1 point) Question 10 Unsaved
When the speech of two groups or of two persons representing two groups both speaking the same “language” exhibits very marked differences.
Question 10 options:

characters

imagery

dialect
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Question 11 (1 point) Question 11 Unsaved
A broad term referring to the recognition of a reality different from appearance.
Question 11 options:

imagery

irony

satire
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Question 12 (1 point) Question 12 Unsaved
The lesson or message that the story intends to send.
Question 12 options:

conflict

plot

theme
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Question 13 (1 point) Question 13 Unsaved
This is the struggle between two opposing forces. In story, it is usually the protagonist vs. some other force.
Question 13 options:

conflict

theme

imagery
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1 Answer

4 votes
Allusion

satire

foreshadowing

allegory

dialect

imagery

theme

conflict
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8.3k points