The three things a story/ writing has to have
Beginning, middle, and end
Introduction, body, and conclusion
Juicy words
Words that are more entertaining and descriptive
A complete sentence needs
A subject (noun) and a predicate (verb)
The 4 main parts of speech
Noun, verb, adjective, and adverb
The words that should be capitalized
"I", proper nouns, and the first word of a sentence
The purpose of the beginning of a story/ writing
Set up the main topic and introduce what the writing will be about.
Sentence lengths and beginnings in a story/ writing
Should all be different
A run-on sentence
2 independent sentences combined incorrectly.
Jumping is a ____ tense verb
Present
The purpose of a period
To end a sentence making a statement
The purpose of the end of a story/ writing
Provide a conclusion for the whole thing, it should tie up the story nicely.
A juicier word for "good"
Excellent, amazing, wonderful, incredible, exceptional, fantastic, etc.
A sentence fragment
An incomplete sentence
The difference between your and you're
Your- Describes when something belongs to someone.
You're- A contraction of "you" and "are"
The purpose of an exclamation mark
The end of an exciting or forceful sentence
The purpose of the middle of a story/ writing
Provide the details that support the main topic
A juicier word for "warm"
Scorching, blazing, fiery, sweltering, etc.
I love blue it is my favorite color it reminds me of the sky. This is a ______
Run-on sentence
The difference between to, too, and two
To- Preposition meaning toward or until
Too- Adverb meaning a lot or also
Two- The number
The purpose of a comma
To separate ideas, for a list, or to show a pause in the sentence
The climax of a story.
The turning point or part in the story where it starts to work out for the main character
A juicier word for "smart"
Brilliant, intelligent, witty, bright, wise, clever, etc.
The man in that house. This is a _______
Sentence Fragment
The difference between their, there, and they're
Their- a possessive pronoun that shows ownership
There- Describes where something or someone is or is going.
They're- a contraction of "they" and "are"
The purpose of an apostrophe
To show ownership or for a contraction