Name the food
Sweet and Sour Pork
A well-known, overused phrase.
Cliche
Words that describe a noun.
E.g. grumpy, ecstatic, green, lumpy.
Adjectives
Describes verbs -
Harry ate sloppily.
Garry jumped high.
Moira screamed furiously.
Adverbs
What two words are pronounced differently but spelt "wind"
Wind and wind
"You wind me up!"
"OMG THIS WIND!!!!"
Unscramble this word:
ingonayn
Is used to show a piece of writing is related to/based in Aotearoa, or a character is Maori.
Te Reo Maori
Using we, you or us to make the audience feel involved.
Personal Pronoun
Colloquial language
Language used in everyday, casual conversation. Includes slang.
Which NZ town or city is first to see the sun?
Gisbourne
Smiliest kid in class
Boston
Informal language used by different cultures within a society. Establishes identity and shows membership to certain groups.
Slang
Reminder phrase for your exams:
I'm not an...
Ama-TEEA!!!
A story is told through a random flow of thoughts as a character thinks them.
Narrative Voice - Internal Monologue
Student who always wants "lots of fish" in shared lunches
Miles
Name the country this flag belongs to:
Greece
When you go camping, you'll need a tent, water, sleeping bag, pillow, boots... and a billion other things!
Hyperbole
Listing
Language belonging to a specific job, hobby or field of study, used to sound knowledgeable and exclude those who don’t understand it.
Jargon
A lot of soldiers have been killed in friendly fire.
Oxymoron
Name 2 ingredients in white bread
Yeast
Water
Flour
Sugar
Ginger - NO
Strawberry blonde - YES
Hunter
Name a technique used in italics:
‘I got a lead, Dom.’
‘You got a lead.’
I can’t batter you, I can’t fool you, I can only hook your curiosity.
‘I phoned the precinct where Sixsmith’s case was processed.’
Dialogue
Alliteration
Name the technique in italics:
‘I got a lead, Dom.’
‘You got a lead.’
I can’t batter you, I can’t fool you, I can only hook your curiosity.
‘I phoned the precinct where Sixsmith’s case was processed.’
Internal Monologue
Repetition
Identify one example of emotive language (can be more than 1 word), and the emotion associated with it:
‘I got a lead, Dom.’
‘You got a lead.’
I can’t batter you, I can’t fool you, I can only hook your curiosity.
I can't
Batter
Fool
Hook your curiosity
Name of the third planet from the sun
Earth