Figurative Language
Plot & Conflict
Grammar & Punctuation
Word Power (Vocab)
Reading Strategies
100

A comparison of two unlike things using "like" or "as."

(A: What is a simile?)

100

The most exciting point or the turning point of a story.

(A: What is the climax?)

100

A word that takes the place of a noun, such as "he," "she," or "they."

 (A: What is a pronoun?)

100

The dictionary definition of a word.

(A: What is denotation?)

100

To make an "educated guess" based on text evidence and your own knowledge.

(A: What is making an inference?)

200

"The wind whispered through the trees."

(A: What is personification?)

200

A struggle between a character and an outside force, like a storm.

(A: What is person vs. nature?)

200

Use this punctuation mark to join two independent clauses without a conjunction

(A: What is a semicolon?)

200

The emotional feeling or "vibe" associated with a word.

 (A: What is connotation?)

200

Using the words around an unknown word to figure out its meaning.

(A: What are context clues?)

300

Extreme exaggeration, such as "I have a million things to do today!"

(A: What is hyperbole?)

300

The part of the plot where the author introduces the characters and setting.

(A: What is the exposition?)

300

FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So) are examples of these.

(A: What are coordinating conjunctions?)

300

To take someone else's work or ideas and pass them off as your own.

(A: What is to plagiarize?)

300

 Citing specific parts of the text to prove your answer.

(A: What is using text evidence?)

400

 A reference to a well-known person, place, or event from history or literature.

(A: What is an allusion?)

400

The message or "lesson learned" from a work of fiction.

(A: What is the theme?)

400

A group of words containing a subject and a verb that can stand alone as a sentence.

 (A: What is an independent clause?)

400

This academic term means to break something down into parts to examine it closely.

(A: What is to analyze?)

400

To restate the main points of a text in a shorter way.

(A: What is to summarize?)

500

When the audience knows something the characters do not.

(A: What is dramatic irony?)

500

Hints or clues about what will happen later in the story.

(A: What is foreshadowing?)

500

To avoid this error, ensure your singular subject has a singular verb.

(A: What is subject-verb agreement?) 



500

A story of a person's life written by that person.

(A: What is an autobiography?) 



500

The author's reason for writing (Persuade, Inform, Entertain).

(A: What is author's purpose?) 



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