A word that modifies a noun
Adjective
The two main things a complete sentence needs
A story
Narrative
You don't capitalize these words in a _____, unless they are the first or last word: a, an, and, as, at, but, by, for, in, nor, of, on, or, the, and up
Title
Passing off others' ideas as your own
Plagiarism
A word that modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb
Adverb
An incomplete sentence, missing a subject, predicate, or both
Fragment
Convincing the reader/audience to do or believe something using facts and anecdotes
Persuasive
Spell "should not" as a contraction
Shouldn't
The section at the end of research writing that lists your sources
Bibliography/Works Cited
A word that takes the place of a noun
Pronoun
Multiple complete sentences linked without proper punctuation or conjunctions
Run-on
Telling a series of events in order
Sequence
The main 2 things apostrophes are used for
Possession (Bob's lunch)
Contractions (You're great)
Part of speech of the word "after" in, "I'll see you after class."
Preposition
A linking word
Conjunction
The part of the sentence with the person or thing doing the action
Subject
A (usually) 5 paragraph essay that requires analyzing a text to respond to a prompt
Text Dependent Analysis (TDA)
Two ways to fix a run-on
Combine (with conjunctions/punctuation) or separate into multiple sentences
The logical fallacy in "The medicine works because it's effective."
Circular reasoning
The possessive pronoun in the sentence "She gave the book to him, but it's mine, so I'll ask for it."
Mine
The part of the sentence with the person or thing receiving the action
Predicate
Text structure of "I have been eating lots of junk food and not exercising, therefore, I haven't been feeling well"
Cause and Effect
This is where an apostrophe goes when a noun is both plural and possessive
After the "s"
The introduction to a piece of writing that is meant to grab the reader's attention
Hook