Literary Terms, COS-ETH
Want to be able to distinguish your limericks from your haikus and your paeans from your panegyrics? Dive deep into literary terms and forms.
Literary Terms Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Costa Book Awards, series of literary awards given annually to writers resident in the United Kingdom and Ireland......
counting-out rhyme, gibberish formula used by children, usually as a preliminary to games in which one child must......
couplet, a pair of end-rhymed lines of verse that are self-contained in grammatical structure and meaning. A couplet......
courtesy literature, literature comprising courtesy books and similar pieces. Though it was essentially a book......
crepuscolarismo, (Italian: “twilight school”), a group of early 20th-century Italian poets whose work was characterized......
criollismo, preoccupation in the arts and especially the literature of Latin America with native scenes and types.......
Croatian literature, the literature of the Croats, a South Slavic people of the Balkans speaking the Croatian language......
Crossword Book Awards, any of a series of Indian literary awards established in 1998 by Indian book retailer Crossword,......
Culhwch and Olwen, (c. 1100), Welsh prose work that is one of the earliest known Arthurian romances. It is a lighthearted......
culteranismo, in Spanish literature, an esoteric style of writing that attempted to elevate poetic language and......
curtal sonnet, a curtailed or contracted sonnet. It refers specifically to a sonnet of 11 lines rhyming abcabc......
cyberpunk, a science-fiction subgenre characterized by countercultural antiheroes trapped in a dehumanized, high-tech......
cyborg, term blending the words cybernetic and organism, originally proposed in 1960 to describe a human being......
cycle, in literature, a group of prose or poetic narratives, usually of different authorship, centring on a legendary......
cynghanedd, Welsh poetic device. It is a complicated system of alliteration and internal rhyme, obligatory in the......
cywydd, Welsh verse form, a kind of short ode in rhyming couplets in which one rhyme is accented and the other......
Czech literature, the body of writing in the Czech language. Before 1918 there was no independent Czechoslovak......
cénacle, a literary coterie formed around various of the early leaders of the Romantic movement in France, replacing......
dactyl, metrical foot consisting of one long (classical verse) or stressed (English verse) syllable followed by......
Danish literature, the body of writings produced in the Danish and Latin languages. During Denmark’s long union......
Below is a list of notable deaths in 2024, arranged in chronological order. (The age of the individual is in...
debate, formal, oral confrontation between two individuals, teams, or groups who present arguments to support opposing......
decadence, a period of decline or deterioration of art or literature that follows an era of great achievement.......
decorum, in literary style, the appropriate rendering of a character, action, speech, or scene. The concept of......
denouement, conclusion after the climax of a narrative in which the complexities of the plot are unraveled and......
descort, a synonym for lai, a medieval Provençal lyric in which the stanzas are nonuniform. The term also refers......
diablerie, a representation in words or pictures of black magic or of dealings with the devil. Among the literary......
diaeresis, (from Greek diairein, “to divide”), the resolution of one syllable into two, especially by separating......
dialogue, in its widest sense, the recorded conversation of two or more persons, especially as an element of drama......
diary, form of autobiographical writing, a regularly kept record of the diarist’s activities and reflections. Written......
diction, choice of words, especially with regard to correctness, clearness, or effectiveness. Any of the four generally......
dilemma tale, typically African form of short story whose ending is either open to conjecture or is morally ambiguous,......
dime novel, a type of inexpensive, usually paperback, melodramatic novel of adventure popular in the United States......
Dionysian, characteristic of the god Dionysus or the cult of worship of Dionysus; specifically, of a sensuous,......
dipsas, a serpent with a bite said to produce intense thirst. The snake was the subject of a story told by several......
dissociation of sensibility, phrase used by T.S. Eliot in the essay “The Metaphysical Poets” (1921) to explain......
dithyramb, choral song in honour of the wine god Dionysus. The form was known as early as the 7th century bc in......
doggerel, a low, or trivial, form of verse, loosely constructed and often irregular, but effective because of its......
dolce stil nuovo, the style of a group of 13th–14th-century Italian poets, mostly Florentines, whose vernacular......
domestic tragedy, drama in which the tragic protagonists are ordinary middle-class or lower-class individuals,......
doppelgänger, (German: “double goer”), in German folklore, a wraith or apparition of a living person, as distinguished......
double dactyls, a light-verse form consisting of eight lines of two dactyls each, arranged in two stanzas. The......
dramatic irony, a literary device by which the audience’s or reader’s understanding of events or individuals in......
dramatic literature, the texts of plays that can be read, as distinct from being seen and heard in performance.......
dramatic monologue, a poem written in the form of a speech of an individual character; it compresses into a single......
dramaturgy, the art or technique of dramatic composition or theatrical representation. In this sense English dramaturgy......
drame bourgeois, type of play that enjoyed brief popularity in France in the late 18th century. Written for and......
dream allegory, allegorical tale presented in the narrative framework of a dream. Especially popular in the Middle......
drott-kvaett, a medieval Scandinavian verse form used in skaldic poetry. Drott-kvaett consists of stanzas of eight......
duan, a poem or song in Scottish Gaelic and Irish Gaelic literature. The word was used by James Macpherson for......
Dutch literature, the body of written works in the Dutch language as spoken in the Netherlands and northern Belgium.......
dwarf, an individual who is much below the ordinary stature or size for his ethnic group or species. (For the physiology......
débat, a type of literary composition popular especially in medieval times in which two or more usually allegorical......
echo verse, a type of verse in which repetition of the end of a line or stanza imitates an echo. The repetition......
eclogue, a short pastoral poem, usually in dialogue, on the subject of rural life and the society of shepherds,......
education novel, a genre popular in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in which a plan of education was set......
eisteddfod, formal assembly of Welsh bards and minstrels that originated in the traditions of court bards of medieval......
elegiac stanza, in poetry, a quatrain in iambic pentameter with alternate lines rhyming. Though the older and more......
elegy, meditative lyric poem lamenting the death of a public personage or of a friend or loved one; by extension,......
elf, in Germanic folklore, originally, a spirit of any kind, later specialized into a diminutive creature, usually......
elision, (Latin: “striking out”), in prosody, the slurring or omission of a final unstressed vowel that precedes......
Elizabethan literature, body of works written during the reign of Elizabeth I of England (1558–1603), probably......
ellipsis, figure of speech characterized by the deliberate omission of a word or words that are, however, understood......
embedded journalism, the practice of placing journalists within and under the control of one side’s military during......
emblem book, collection of symbolic pictures, usually accompanied by mottoes and expositions in verse and often......
enclosed rhyme, in poetry, the rhyming pattern abba found in certain quatrains, such as the first verse of Matthew......
encomium, a prose or poetic work in which a person, thing, or abstract idea is glorified. Originally an encomium......
end rhyme, in poetry, a rhyme that occurs in the last syllables of verses, as in stanza one of Robert Frost’s “Stopping......
end stop, in prosody, a grammatical pause at the end of a line of verse, as in these lines from Alexander Pope’s......
English literature, the body of written works produced in the English language by inhabitants of the British Isles......
- Introduction
- Old English, Poetry, Manuscripts
- Prose, Novels, Poetry
- Medieval, Poetry, Romance
- Lyric Poetry, Verse Forms, Metrics
- Medieval, Renaissance, Poetry
- Chaucer, Gower, Poetry
- Medieval, Prose, Romance
- Renaissance, Poetry, Drama
- Elizabethan Poetry, Prose
- Sonnets, Poetry, Rhyme
- Elizabethan, Early Stuart, Drama
- Shakespeare, Plays, Poetry
- Restoration, Romanticism, Modernism
- Early Stuart, Poetry, Prose
- Jonson, Cavalier Poets
- Milton, Poetry, Epic
- Restoration, Poetry, Drama
- Locke, Enlightenment, Essays
- Enlightenment, Satire, Novels
- Swift, Satire, Poetry
- Novels, Fiction, Classics
- Romanticism, Poetry, Wordsworth
- Romanticism, Poetry, Novels
- Poetry, Romanticism, Satire
- Discursive Prose
- Victorian, Post-Romantic, Poetry
- Dickens, Victorian, Novels
- Romanticism, Poetry, Verse
- Victorian, Poetry, Novels
- Modernism, Poetry, Novels
- Modernism, Poetry, Novels
- WWI, Interwar, Poetry
- WWII, Poetry, Novels
- Poetry, Verse, Sonnets
- 21st Century, Poetry, Novels
englyn, a group of strict Welsh poetic metres. The most popular form is the englyn unodl union (“direct monorhyme......
enjambment, in prosody, the continuation of the sense of a phrase beyond the end of a line of verse. T.S. Eliot......
enthymeme, in syllogistic, or traditional, logic, name of a syllogistic argument that is incompletely stated. In......
entrelacement, a literary technique in which several simultaneous stories are interlaced in one larger narrative.......
envelope, in poetry, a device in which a line or a stanza is repeated so as to enclose a section of verse, as in......
envoi, the usually explanatory or commendatory concluding remarks to a poem, essay, or book. The term is specifically......
epanalepsis, the repetition of a word or phrase after intervening language, as in the first line of Algernon Charles......
epic, long narrative poem recounting heroic deeds, although the term has also been loosely used to describe novels,......
epic formula, convention of language and theme peculiar to oral epic poetry that is often carried over to the written......
epic simile, an extended simile often running to several lines, used typically in epic poetry to intensify the......
epideictic oratory, according to Aristotle, a type of suasive speech designed primarily for rhetorical effect.......
epigram, originally an inscription suitable for carving on a monument, but since the time of the Greek Anthology......
epilogue, a supplementary element in a literary work. The term epilogue carries slightly different meanings in......
epinicion, lyric ode honouring a victor in one of the great Hellenic games. The epinicion was performed usually......
epirrhema, in ancient Greek Old Comedy, an address usually about public affairs. It was spoken by the leader of......
epistle, a composition in prose or poetry written in the form of a letter to a particular person or group. In literature......
epistolary novel, a novel told through the medium of letters written by one or more of the characters. Originating......
epitaph, an inscription in verse or prose upon a tomb; and, by extension, anything written as if to be inscribed......
epithalamium, song or poem to the bride and bridegroom at their wedding. In ancient Greece, the singing of such......
epithet, adjective or phrase that is used to express a characteristic of a person or thing, such as Ivan the Terrible.......
epizeuxis, in literature, a form of repetition in which a word is repeated immediately for emphasis, as in the......
epode, a verse form composed of two lines differing in construction and often in metre, the second shorter than......
epyllion, brief narrative poem in dactylic hexameter of ancient Greece, usually dealing with mythological and romantic......
Ercles vein, a rousing, somewhat bombastic manner of public speaking or writing. In William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer......
erotica, literary or artistic works having an erotic theme; especially, books treating of sexual love in a sensuous......
Escola Velha, (Portuguese: “Old School”), Spanish dramatists in the early 16th century who were influenced by the......
essay, an analytic, interpretative, or critical literary composition usually much shorter and less systematic and......
Estonian literature, body of writings in the Estonian language. The consecutive domination of Estonia from the......
Ethiopian literature, writings either in classical Geʿez (Ethiopic) or in Amharic, the principal modern language......
ethos, in rhetoric, the character or emotions of a speaker or writer that are expressed in the attempt to persuade......