Argument
Point of View
Figurative Language/Literary Elements
Informational Text Structures/Features
Ms. Lee
100

The three rhetorical appeals defined

What is ethos (trust, credibility), pathos (passion, emotion, feelings), and logos (logic, facts)?

100

He, she, it, they, them, theirs, and the reader are examples of words that belong to which point of view.

What is third person limited/third person omniscient?

100

A story's setting defined

What is time and place?

100

The primary text features

What is: title, picture, illustration, heading, graph, caption, annotation, glossary, chart, footnote, table of content

100

Age of Ms. Lee

What is 27?

200

The following is an example of a ___________ fallacy: The level of mercury in seafood may be unsafe, but what will fishers do to support their families?

What is a red herring fallacy?

200

The narrator is a character in the story.

What is First Person?

200

Idiom defined

What is a phrase whose meaning cannot be determined from its literal word meanings?

200

This text structure explains how one event leads to another, often using words like "because," "therefore," and "as a result."

What is cause and effect?

200

Number of years Ms. Lee has taught at PRSMS.

What is 4 years?

300

A Doritos commercial makes you laugh

What is Pathos?

300

The narrator can reveal what many characters are thinking, feeling, and doing.

What is Third Person Omniscient?

300

Character(s) and plot defined

What are the people and events in a story?

300

This feature is found at the end of a book and provides definitions for specialized terms used in the text.

What is the glossary?

300

Ms. Lee went to this University.

What is The University of Central Florida?

400

Example of _______ fallacy: The apples on the top of the box look good. The entire box of apples must be good

What is a hasty generalization?

400

They found themselves in bed and watching, by the dim light from the night-light, the rest of Mary Poppins' unpacking being performed. Jane and Michael sat hugging themselves and watching. It was all so surprising that they could find nothing to say. But they knew, both of them, that something strange and wonderful had happened. Label the point of view.

What is third person omniscient?

400

Identify the figurative language: The bee buzzed around my head

What is onomatopoeia?

400

In an article discussing the impact of deforestation, the author explains how the removal of trees leads to soil erosion, which then causes loss of fertile land and negatively affects local wildlife. The article uses words like "because," "therefore," and "as a result" to show the relationship between these events. This text structure is used to organize the information.

What is cause and effect?

400

What does Ms. Lee put in her hot coffee?

What is nothing?

500

Determine what rhetorical appeal AND type of reasoning is used in the statement: “All men are mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.”

What is Logos and deductive reasoning?

500

The point of view changes in the following passage:

"I walked through the forest, feeling the cool breeze on my face. You could hear the rustling of leaves and the chirping of birds. They say the forest is magical at dusk."

What is the change from first person to second person to third person?

500

Name the figurative language: He was a hurricane when he entered the room

What is a metaphor?

500

In a scientific article about the water cycle, the author describes the process of evaporation, condensation, and precipitation. The article explains how water from oceans and lakes turns into vapor, rises into the atmosphere, cools and forms clouds, and then falls back to Earth as rain or snow. This text structure is used to explain the events and the relationship between each stage.

What is sequence?

500

One of Ms. Lee's most said phrases.

What is ...?

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