Reading
English
Writing
Reading #2
English #2
100

List one type of text structure

Description, Compare and Contrast, Order and Sequence, Cause and Effect, or Problem and Solution

100

Clues in the text that help the reader understand the meaning of an unknown word

Context Clues

100

The two parts of the middle paragraphs in an opinion paper

Reason and Evidence

100

This type of image shows the reader where something is located in the world

Map

100

The two parts of a complete sentence

Subject and Predicate

200

Made up of evidence from the text and your personal schema

Inferences

200

Name four types of punctuation marks

Period, Question mark, Comma, Exclamation point, Quotation marks, Ellipses, Dash, Parentheses

200

How you should always be writing in your journals

Cursive

200

The ice cream scoops represent what 

Supporting details
200

The meaning of the prefix Tele (example words: telescope, telephone, telepathy)

Far away, distant

300
Something that causes problems for the character

Conflict 

300

List these words in alphabetical order: clank, clammy, clades, claims, clause

clades, claims, clammy, clank, clause

300

The first paragraph of an opinion paper

Introduction
300

The lesson that we learn from a story

Theme

300

Antonym to the word clean

dirty

400

The overall message of the text, what the text is mostly about

The main idea

400

Words to use instead of mad

angry, furious, enraged 

400

What Miss Manning wrote her opinion paper about

Purple is the best color

400

Time or Place where a story takes place

Setting

400

Words that sound the same but are spelled differently

Homophones

500

Uses Somebody, wanted, but, so, then,

Summarizing a text

500

Name or describe the four types of sentences (double points if you actually name them)

declarative, interrogative, exclamatory, imperative

500

Used to wrap up your paper

Conclusion 

500

Adventurous, helpful, hard-working, mean, and selfish are examples of what 

Character traits

500
List three capitalization rules

Titles, People's Names, First word in a sentence, Dates and Holidays, Locations, Product Names, The Pronoun "I"

M
e
n
u