"Her smile was like a warm hug" is an example of one.
What is a simile?
The main character in a piece of literature.
What is the protagonist?
The last sentence in the introduction.
What is the thesis statement?
The two meanings of "it's."
What are it is and it has?
This is a phrase that renames the noun that comes before it.
What is an appositive?
What is a metaphor?
The moment that gets the story moving.
What is the inciting incident?
The first sentence in a body paragraph.
What is the claim?
The word that would be used in this sentence:
That's ______ coat over there.
What is y-o-u-r?
and, but, or, nor, for, yet, so
What are conjunctions?
"She should have shut the shed" is an example of this.
What is alliteration?
The untwisting or unraveling of the story.
What is the denouement or resolution?
The last sentence in a body paragraph.
What is the restatement of claim?
When someone will take something, they will do this.
What is a-c-c-e-p-t it?
"Hello, John!" is an example of this type of comma.
What is noun of address?
An extreme exaggeration.
What is a hyperbole?
When the narrator is the character in the story.
What is first person point of view?
This has to be given right after each proof.
What is an explanation of proof?
This word shows that something belongs to it.
What is i-t-s?
It's the comma that comes before "and" in a list.
What is the Oxford comma?
Descriptive language that paints a picture in the reader's mind.
What is imagery?
The feeling of the setting of a story.
What is the mood?
What you put between paragraphs in an essay.
What are transitions?
This is a contraction for you are.
What is y-o-u-'-r-e?
To begin, you need a comma after this type of phrase.
What is an introductory phrase?