She was Victor's bride to be.
Who is Elizabeth?
This part of speech represents a capitalized name or title for a specific person, place or thing.
What is a proper noun?
This part of speech modifies and describes a verb.
What is an adverb?
To inspire with love; to captivate.
What is enamor?
To seize and hold power or authority in an illegal manner.
What is Usurp?
An exaggerated statement or claim.
What is hyperbole?
This punctuation separates clauses with no conjunction present.
What is a semicolon?
She was on trial for the murder of William Frankenstein.
Who is Justine?
This part of speech does not imply an action, but rather describes the subject.
What is a linking verb?
This part of speech describes a noun.
What is an adjective?
A strong criticism.
What is stricture?
Flat treeless plains of the arctic regions.
What is Tundra?
A reference that implies something figurative is literal.
What is a metaphor?
This punctuation separates clauses with a conjunction present.
What is a comma?
The location where the monster said he would go to with a female creation.
What is South America?
This part of speech represents direction, time, place or location.
What is a preposition?
This part of speech represents a word that was created by combining two pre-existing words.
What is a contraction?
To exchange in kind; to repay.
What is reciprocate?
A strong inclination towards something.
What is proclivity?
Creating a human existence, characteristics or behaviors to a God, animal or object.
What is anthropomorphism?
This style of writing is based on a personal perspective or experience.
What is a narrative?
He died in Victor's arms.
Who is Alphonse (Victor's father)?
This part of speech connects clauses.
What is a conjunction?
This noun function follows the direct object and renames it.
What is objective complement?
An act or statement that shows disrespect towards something considered sacred.
What is blasphemy?
To obliterate or erase completely.
What is expunge?
A figurative comparison using like or as.
What is a simile?
Slang terms and common language used in a dialogue, which are often prohibited in certain writing pieces.
What are dead words?
The location where Victor died.
What is Walton's boat?
This noun function receives the action.
What is the direct object?
This noun function performs the action.
What is the subject?
Scornful treatment or contempt, especially as a result of disgraceful behavior.
What is oppobrium?
The point opposite and farthest from the base; summit.
What is vertex?
The occurrence of the same letter or sound between two or more words.
What is alliteration?
Contractions and common dialogue or slang terms are prohibited in this style of writing.
What is academic writing or formal tone?
He was the professor that inspired Frankenstein into Natural Philosophy.
Who is M. Waldman?
This noun function receives the direct object.
What is the indirect object?
This noun function follows a preposition?
What is the object of preposition?
An ostentatious display of bravery.
What is bravado?
To strip a plant of leaves, thereby damaging or destroying.
What is defoliate?
A figurative reference when two opposing words come together.
What is an oxymoron?
Ms. Stefania refers to this form of writing as getting the reader to drink your kool-ade (to buy what you're selling). It is written with a subjective rhetoric.
What is persuasive?
Victor's demise/death.
What is poor health? (anything relating to this area).
This noun function comes after a linking verb and renames the subject.
What is predicate nominative?
This noun function immediately follows and renames the noun before it to clarify or classify it.
What is appositive?
A sudden collapse or downfall.
What is debacle?
To make by putting parts together. To invent in order or deceive.
What is fabricate?
Applying human characteristics to something not human or inanimate objects.
What is personification?
This style of writing shows a claim and a counterclaim and presents an objective rhetoric.
What is argumentative?