Agreements
Lit! Devices I
Lit! Devices II
Good Reads
Pop Life
100

The first agreement of the Four Agreements, I guess it's in the right pecking order?

Be impeccable with your word.

100

It's the comparison of two very different things without the use of like or as? For example, the moon is cheese.

Metaphor

100

When a writer makes you feel a way. It's the literary device that pairs well with tone.

Mood

100

Katniss Everdeen... boy was she hungry!!!

The Hunger Games

100

The character from these movies is hilarious! From her destination weddings, to big happy families, to her even going to jail. Is that a man who plays her role?

Madea

200

When they say, "Let problems roll off your back." What they really mean is, according to one of these Four agreements...?

Don't take anything personally.

200

Oh the place you'll go in any novel, especially if the author provides good descriptions of places. 

Setting

200

It's the technique an author generally uses to describe a protagonist. Usually it's by what they say, think, do, look like, or the effect they have on other characters. 

Characterization

200

In this Shakespearian play, he's the Moor who had a deceptive friend in Iago.

Othello

200

Gone way too soon... he was one of Brooklyn's Finest. We liked the way that he moved!

Pop Smoke

300

Because when you assume, 9 times out of 10 you may be dead wrong. No facts is wack! So what should one do?

Don't make assumptions.

300

From beginning, middle, and end is the structure of a story that also goes by this name?

Narrative Arc

300

The description for this device could be Man vs. Man, or Man vs. Self, Man vs. Society, or even Man vs. Nature. Shouldn't there be a resolution for all of this?!

Conflict

300

T.H.U.G. is the acronym for this book by Angie Thomas, which was adapted into a movie.

The Hate You Give

300

Though he never fully says it outright, it's true. Buzz Lightyear... you got a friend in me. Who's this character? And from what movie?

Woody

Toy Story

400

At worst, try to do this...

Always do your best!

400

Literally speaking is denotation, but what's the opposite? Figuratively speaking? I mean, when words say more than what they mean?

Connotation

400

The author's attitude toward a given subject they are writing about.

Tone

400
Two star-crossed lovers, that's all they were. Isn't that how Shakespeare described them?

Romeo and Juliet

400

Peter, Eddie, and Miles are all amazing! How are they all connected? Not by webs, of course!

The Amazing Spiderman (Spider-Verse)

500

In English these two parts of speech must be in agreement for a sentence to exist?

Subject (noun) Verb Agreement

500

It's the rhetorical strategy when the speaker of a text appeals to the emotional disposition of their audience?

Pathos

500

It's the rhetorical strategy when the speaker of a text appeals to the rationale of their audience?

Logos

500

Marked by divine power with her white hair contrasting fiercely upon her black skin, this protagonist, of this book series, looks to restore magic in the land of Orisha?

Children of Blood and Bone

500

Added as section 2803 within the Education, Labor and Family Assistance Article VII budget bill, it suggests that there should be bell-to-bell instruction without restrictions. The bottom line is students hate the policy!!! Why is that??? And what is it???

The cell phone policy.

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