Literary Devices
Plot & Structure
Poetry Devices
Point of View
Persuasive Writing
100

This is the difference between similes and metaphors

What is... similies use "like" or "as" to compare two ideas, whereas metaphors do not.

100

The sequence of events in a story.

What is the plot.

100

Repeating words or phrases for emphasis.

Repetition

100

The narrator tells the story from their own point of view, using I or we.

What is first person?

100
Three terms that are synonyms for what the text is mostly about. 

What are the central idea (or main idea), thesis and big claim

200

“Buzz,” “crash,” and “pop” are examples of this device.


What is onomatopoeia?

200

The lesson or message of a story.

What is the theme

200

The pattern of rhymes 

Rhyme scheme

200

“You walk into the room and feel nervous” uses which POV?

What is second person?

200
Four things readers do in order to determine the central idea of text

What are analyze the title and subheadings

Analyze the first paragraph

Identify and analyze key details

Analyze the last paragraph

300

“She sells seashells by the seashore” uses which sound device?

What is alliteration

300

The highest point of interest, the place where ideas are drawn together, an important turning point in a series of actions, or the most forceful event in a story.

What is the climax?

300

Language that appeals to the five senses.

What is imagery 

or 

What are sensory details

300

The narrator knows the thoughts of only one character.

What is third person limited?

300

Three types of text structures

What are Cause and Effect

Advantages and Disadvantages

Problem and Solution

Classification 

Compare and contrast

400

“This homework is a mountain.” What device is used?

What is a metaphor?

400

The main problem in the story and how it is resolved

What is conflict and conflict resolution

400

A literary device that repeats consonant sounds within nearby words

Consonance

400

She hadn't planned on going to the party, but when she heard that Forest was going, she decided to show up. When she arrived, she immediately felt the vibe and knew her decision to attend was a good one.

What is third person limited point of view.

Why? It uses third-person pronouns like she and her rather than I or you.

The narrator focuses on the thoughts and feelings of one character (what she thought and felt), which is typical of limited third person.

400

Three types of rhetorical devices authors use to persuade readers to their point of view on an argument

Loaded Language                     Parallelism

Repetition                                Direct address

Rhetorical Question                          

500

He waited a lifetime for the space shuttle to launch. 

What is hyperbole?

A hyperbole is an extreme exaggeration. 

500

The only type of conflict where the character has an internal struggle, CHARACTER VS SELF 
 

What is internal conflict

500

Identify the rhyme scheme of the following stanza

And, as his strength
Failed him at length,
He met a pilgrim shadow—
“Shadow,” said he,
“Where can it be—
This land of Eldorado?”

A A B C C B

500

The narrator knows the thoughts of all characters.

What is third person omniscient?

500

What is the difference between mood and tone? 

Mood is the feeling or emotional atmosphere that the writing creates for the reader.

Tone is the author’s or narrator’s attitude toward the subject, characters, or audience.

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