Theme & Central Idea
Tone & Mood
Argumentative Writing
Figurative Language
Vocab
100

What is theme?
 

→ The message or lesson of a story

100

What is tone?
 

→ Author’s attitude toward the subject

100

What is a claim?
 

A statement or position that the writer is trying to prove

100

What is a simile?
 

Comparison using “like” or “as”

100

What does “analyze” mean?
 

Break down and examine

200

200: What’s the difference between theme and topic?
 

 
Theme = lesson; statement. 

Topic = one word.

200

What is mood?
 

The feeling the reader gets

200

What is a counterclaim?
 

The opposing viewpoint

200

What is a metaphor?
 

Direct comparison WITHOUT “like” or “as”

200

What does “cite evidence” mean?
 

Use details from the text to support answers

300

Give one theme from The House on Mango Street
 

300: Give one theme from The House on Mango Street
→ Identity, belonging, gender roles, etc.

300

"The house creaked with every step. Shadows stretched across the walls, and a cold breeze slipped through the broken window."
What is the Mood? 

Suspenseful / Eerie

300

What is a rebuttal?

A response that disproves the counterclaim

300

What is personification?
 

Giving human traits to non-human things

300

What does “infer” mean?
 

Make a logical guess based on evidence

400

How does a theme develop over a text?
 

Through characters, events, and conflicts

400

"Of course I love when my alarm doesn’t go off and I’m late for school. That’s just the best way to start my day."
What is the Tone? 

Sarcastic

400

Why include a counterclaim?
 

To strengthen your argument and show both sides

400

“The wind whispered through the trees.”  

→ Personification

400

What does “objective summary” mean?
 

A summary without opinions

500

Why can a theme NOT be one word?
 

→ Because it must express a complete idea or message

500

"She clenched her fists as she reread the message. How could they betray her like this? Her face burned, and her heart pounded."
What is the Tone?  

Angry / Bitter

500

What makes evidence strong?
 

Relevant, credible, and supports the claim

500

Why do authors use figurative language?
 

To create imagery and deeper meaning

500

What does “relevant” mean?
 

Directly related to the topic

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