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Hello and welcome! We like having newcomers around here and hope you'll stick around and contribute. This place may look intimidating but it's pretty simple once you get used to it. The purpose of this guide is to teach you the basics of getting around, introduce you to our rules and policies, and give you links to all the resources you need. When in doubt, Ask The Tropers. We try not to bite. Before we get started, let's cover the most important questions. Q: What is TV Tropes? A: TV Tropes is a wiki, sort of like Wikipedia but using different software and with a different purpose. We describe and collect examples of Tropes in Media. We also host reviews, liveblogs, and have forums where you can talk with other tropers. Q: What is a Trope? A: A trope is a narrative device or convention used in storytelling or production of a creative work. Read Below for more details. Q: What is a Troper? A: A troper is someone who participates in discovering and writing about tropes: in other words, you. It's a word we made up and we're proud of it. Yes, it autocorrects to "trooper". You've seen this somewhere before… Merriam-Webster gives a definition of "trope" as a "figure of speech." In storytelling, a trope is just that — a conceptual figure of speech, a storytelling shorthand for a concept that the audience will recognize and understand instantly. Above all, a trope is a convention. It can be a plot trick, a setup, a narrative structure, a character type, a linguistic idiom... you know it when you see it. Tropes are not inherently disruptive to a story; however, when the trope itself becomes intrusive, distracting the viewer rather than serving as shorthand, it has become a cliché. On This Very Wiki, "trope" has the even more general meaning of a pattern in storytelling, not only within the media works themselves, but also in related aspects such as the behind-the-scenes aspects of creation, the technical features of a medium, and the fan experience. The idea being that storytelling is not just writing, it is the whole process of creating and telling/showing a story. Etymologically, "trope" is from Greek, meaning "turn". In other words, a trope in literature was a "turn of phrase." Of course, the meaning expanded a while ago. Around here, it is a stunt root, as in, "That isn't really different enough from our other tropes to be separately tropeable." Whether or not a subject is a trope is referred to as being "tropeable" or "tropeworthy"; works that are particularly tropeable are often referred to as Troperiffic. The intent being to set Noah Webster spinning in his grave as quickly as possible. Don't let all this give you the impression that we exactly invented our sense of "trope": the more or less synonymous expression "resonating tropes" long pre-existed the site and community here, and you will find people outside of and independent of the site using the word "trope" in the same fashion that we do. Note that currently the Oxford English Dictionary actually recognizes the definition "a significant or recurrent theme; a motif", its earliest quotation for this meaning being from 1975. Merriam-Webster also somewhat recognizes this meaning, but twists it into "a common or overused theme or device: cliché", which seems unjustly condemning. Wiktionary, on the other hand, shows that our use of the word was used in 1776. We also didn't invent the notion of finding and cataloging as many tropes as humanly possible or the idea of all media being formed around the same set of core tropes. A perusal of our Books on Trope page and the works linked there will show you that people have been identifying and discussing patterns in media for centuries. The first troper on record was, in fact, Aristotle. Yes, THAT Aristotle. See Playing with a Trope for a comparison of the ways that a trope can be used. main index Narrative Universal Applied Phlebotinum Characterization Characters Characters As Device Dialogue Motifs Narrative Devices Paratext Plots Settings SpectacleGenre Action Adventure Comedy Commercials Crime And Punishment Drama Horror Love News Professional Wrestling Speculative Fiction Sports Story WarMedia Animation (Western) Anime Comic Book Fan Fics Film Game Literature Music And Sound Effects New Media Print Media Radio Sequential Art Tabletop Games Television Theater Videogame WebcomicsTopical Tropes Betrayal Censorship Combat Death Family Fate And Prophecy Food Holiday Memory Money Morality Politics Religion SchoolOther Categories British Telly The Contributors Creator Speak Creators Derivative Works Language Laws And Formulas Show Business Split Personality Stock Room Trope Truth And Lies Truth In Television