Story elements
Parts of Speech
College mascots in WA
famous adventurers
Pop. music lyrics
100

The time and place in which a story occurs.

Setting

100

Frog: He ate a frog on his salad.

Noun

100

The Huskies

UW

100

This pair explored the Louisiana Purchase, reaching the west coast of America in 1805.

Lewis and Clark

100

I came in like a 

Wrecking ball

200

The challenge or problem a protagonist faces.

Conflict

200

He: He likes to eat weird foods.

Pronoun

200

The Cougars

WSU 

200

This American was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, before disappearing without a trace.

Amelia Earhart

200

You can get addicted to a certain kind of sadness

Somebody that I used to know

300

The protagonist’s opposition.

Antagonist

300

But: He liked to eat, but sometimes he wasn’t hungry.

Conjunction 

300

Sasquatch

SFCC/SCC

300

This Venetian explorer sailed from Europe to Asia, but he’s known better now for the game kids play in a pool using his name.

Marco Polo

300

You had my heart inside of your hand and you played it to the beat 

Rolling in the deep

400

A synonym for backstory.

Exposition

400

Over: His favorite place to sit was the balcony over the garden.

Preposition 

400

The knights

Wenatchee Valley CC

400

This British explorer “discovered” the Hawaiian Islands.

James Cook

400

Flip up my cup, mazel tov

I’ve got a feeling

500

The single event that starts the plot moving.

Inciting incident 

500

Is: Is it wrong to be hungry all the time?

Verb

500
Geoducks

Evergreen State U

500

This was the first European to explore the entirety of the Columbia River - establishing trading posts for the American Fur Company.

David Thompson

500

Concrete jungles where dreams are made of

Empire State of mind

M
e
n
u