Vocab
Figurative Language
Characters
Sensory Language
100
The place where the story is set

Setting

100

It's raining cats and dogs!

Idiom

100

Where an author blatantly says a character is kind and what their traits are.

Direct Characterization

100

Suddenly it turned from hard to gooey and slimy and I could feel it running around in my hand.

Makes you feel something
200

The character that is always trying to stop the main character from getting what they want.

Antagonist

200

I would rather eat a log instead of that.

Hyperbole

200

The author uses the characters actions to let the reader figure out how they are characterized.

Indirect characterization

200

Deer leaped from yard to yard as they ate from pear trees. Dogs barked and cats hissed but they remained unphased.

Makes you see things in your mind and possibly hear things.

300

Conversations that are had between characters.

Dialogue 

300

Your eyes are like the sun

Simile

300

A character that doesn't change and doesn't grow throughout the story

Flat character 

300

"KABOOM" A loud explosion set off in the far distance while many others could be heard from miles away. What sensory language was used here?

Onomatopoeia 

400
A way of speaking in a certain area.

Dialect 

400

I too, sing america

Metaphor 

400

A character that changes and grows overtime learning from past mistakes.

Rounded Character

400

The cat purred as I pet its soft, fluffy fur. We sit on the sofa that adjust to how we sit.

Makes you feel a sense of touch

500

The lesson that the author wants to teacher the reader

Theme
500

You do not want to open Pandora's box.

Allusion 

500

How does a character typically learn to get through something.

Through conflict

500

"The soft, velvety petals of the rose felt warm against her fingers."

This can makes you envision a rose and how it feels.

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