epigraph
An epigraph. It is a brief quotation or saying that appears at the beginning of a book, chapter, or section, to set the tone or theme of the work that follows.
Epigraph
Epigraph
The quote at the beginning of a chapter is typically called an "epigraph." It is a quotation or excerpt that sets the tone or theme for the content that follows in the chapter.
It's called alliteration. :)
A quotation at the head of a poem (or novel, or chapter of one) is called an epigraph.The quotation from Dante that opens TS Eliot's "Lovesong of J Alfred Prufrock" is an example of an epigraph.
Yes, a block quotation is sometimes referred to as a long quotation. It is a direct quotation set off from the main text by being indented, larger, or distinctively formatted to indicate that it is a longer excerpt.
The series of events that happen in a literary work is called the "plot." Another common name for the plot is the "storyline."
They are called quotation marks. In some fonts like this one, they are a pair of short lines before and after the quotation at the top of the line like "this". In other fonts these are printed as a pair of inverted apostrophes before the start of the quotation and a pair of apostrophes after. In England, they are sometimes called "Inverted commas" In French the markers are a pair of circumflexes on their side, looking like two "lesser than" signs in mathematics (<) at the beginning of the quotation, and a pair of the opposite sign (>) at the end.
Joseph addison :)
A writer of literary works is called an author or a novelist.
A sequence of words beginning with the same letter as "furrow followed free" is called alliteration.
" means quotation marks. They are found at the front and back of a name that is in quotation. Such as "Toy Story 3".