To change a decimal to a percent, you move the decimal point this many places to the right.
What is two?
This is the main point the author is trying to make in a non-fiction text.
What is the Central Idea?
This type of rock is formed by the cooling and hardening of magma or lava.
What is Igneous?
In a food web, these organisms get their energy directly from the sun.
What are producers (or plants)?
This is your teacher’s absolute favorite caffeinated drink or morning beverage.
What is an Alani?
The value of x in the equation 2x = 10.
What is 5?
When you use "clues from the text" plus "what you already know" to find an answer. An educated guess based on facts about the information given.
What is an inference?
This is the process where one plate sinks beneath another into the mantle.
What is Subduction?
This type of energy is "stored" energy, like a rock sitting at the top of a hill.
What is Potential Energy?
What is your teachers favorite color?
What is pink?
In a coordinate plane, this is the name of the point (0,0).
What is the Origin?
This type of source that comes directly from the author.
What is a primary source?
This organelle is the "brain" of the cell and contains the genetic material (DNA).
What is the Nucleus?
The process by which plants turn sunlight, water, and $CO_2$ into glucose.
What is Photosynthesis?
This is the name of the high school your teacher graduated from.
What is Assumption?
The mathematical term for the "average" of a set of numbers.
What is the Mean?
To get full points on a short answer, you must cite this from the passage. It can either be a direct quote, summary or paraphrase with page number included.
What is textual evidence?
This is the specific part of a plant cell where photosynthesis takes place.
What is the Chloroplast?
In a chemical reaction, the total mass of the reactants must equal the total mass of these.
What are the products?
Your teacher has this many siblings.
What is 5?
If a shirt costs $20 and is 25% off, this is the amount of the discount.
What is $5?
This is the term for the author's attitude toward the subject matter.
What is Tone?
This "force" is what keeps the planets in orbit around the Sun.
What is Gravity?
This theory explains how the Earth's surface is broken into moving plates.
What is Plate Tectonics?
This is where your teacher graduated from college?
What is the University of Kentucky?