Parts of Speech
Literary Terms
Figurative Language
Punctuation
Writing Terms
Random Stuff
100

A word that names a person, place, thing, or idea.

noun

100

This is what we call the series of events in a story

plot

100

"He is as happy as a clam."

simile

100

This is used to separate items in a series

comma

100

This sentence sums up your entire argumentative essay.

claim

100

If the subject is doing the action of the verb, the sentence is written is this voice.

Active

200

A word that takes the place of a noun

pronoun

200

This tells you where and when the story takes place

setting

200

"The trees reached out to the sun."

personification

200

This is used ALONE is separate two independent clauses.

semicolon

200

This type of essay tells a story.

Narrative

200

This is when an author refers to something from another text and expects you to understand without explanation.

allusion

300

A word that describes a noun

adjective

300

This is the feeling created when the reader can't wait to find out what happens next

suspense

300

"Love is a beautiful rose."

metaphor

300

This is used at the end of a sentence in interrogative mood.

question mark

300

Narrative essays should include character's talking, also known as this

dialogue

300

This is the repetition of the ending sounds of words.

rhyme

400

A word that tells how someone does something

adverb

400

This is the last suspenseful part of the story

climax

400

"It's raining cats and dogs."

idiom

400

This is used to show a sudden break in thought.

dash

400

When you quote sources in an essay, be sure to include this type of citation.

TAG Citation

400

This is the repetition of the beginning consonant sounds of words.

alliteration

500

A word used to join words or sentences together

conjunction

500

This is the part of the story where the suspense is slowly building

rising action

500

"My bookbag weighs a ton."

hyperbole

500

This is used to show that the enclosed information is word-for-word from another source.

quotation marks

500

If you use information from a source but don't cite it, you are guilty of this crime.

plagiarism
500

This is the way the author seems to feel about their writing subject.

Tone

600

A word that expresses a sudden thought or feeling

interjection

600

This can be character vs. character, character vs. self, or character vs. nature

conflict

600

"Drip . . . drip . . . drip."

Onomatopoeia

600

This is used to show that some words have been omitted from a quote.

ellipsis

600

After a quote, you should include a couple sentence of this to explain the info in your quote and explain how it backs your claim.

justification

600

This is the universal lesson learned by reading a story.

theme

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