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Terms for subject Literature (1001 entries)
Edwardian Period The period in England when Edward VII was on the throne (1901- 10) i.e. generally between the death of Queen Victoria and the First World War.
elegy A poem that mourns the death of an individual.
elision The merging together of two syllables in a line e.g. "e'er" rather than 'ever'.
Elizabethan actors The popular and regulary featured actors in Elizabethan theatre.
Elizabethan Period The period of time which covers Queen Elizabeth I's reign, from 1558-1603. Shakespeare wrote his early works during the Elizabethan period.
Ellesmere manuscript An illustrated (or illuminated) manuscript thought to date from the fifteenth century of Chaucer's, The Canterbury Tales.
ellipsis (plural, ellipses) A rhetorical device where a word is omitted because it is implied by a previous clause.
Elohist text A source of the Torah.
emblem A symbol which is representative of something.
emotion A conscious state of feeling created by the writer to convey joy, sorrow, love, hate etc to the reader. See mood, ambience and atmosphere
enallage When one grammatical form is used in the place of another.
enapalepsis A type of repetition (phrase or word) with the repetition occurring at the beginning and again at the end of a sentence.
enclitic Collocated to the end of another word, with a dependent meaning.
encyclical Refers to a letter which is meant for a general audience.
end rhyme Rhyme where the last word of each verse is the word that rhymes. This is a very common type of rhyme.
end-stop In poetry this is a line ending in a full pause (such as a full stop or semicolon) End-stopped lines generally highlight a rhyme or point. End-stops contrasts with enjambment or run-on lines.
English sonnet Another term for a Shakespearean sonnet.
enjambment A line in poetry which does not have end punctuation, or a pause, but which continues uninterrupted into the next line. Also referred to as a run-on line.
Enjoy The Meeting ETM
enlightenment The European philosophical and artistic movement, between roughly 1660 and 1770, developing out of the Renaissance and continuing until the nineteenth century. The Enlightenment was an optimistic belief that humanity could improve itself by applying logic and reason to all things. It rejected untested beliefs, superstition, and the "barbarism" of the earlier medieval period, and embraced the literary, architectural, and artistic forms of the Greco-Roman world. The period is sometimes known as the Age of Reason.