This novel had this just like Ho Chi Minh city's but divide it by 2
The Hunger Games
Example: His face looks like Humpty Dumpty
Simile (a comparison with the use of words "like" or "as")
Wands and boarding schools
J.K. Rowling
Mr. Darcy and Lizzie Bennet argue and fall in love.
Pride and Prejudice
This "e" word is the same as the word explain (v)
Elucidate
Dauntless (the brave), Amity (the kind), Erudite (the intelligent), Abnegation (the selfless), and Candor (the honest)
Divergent
Example: The trees begin moving their hands, grabbing the fallen leaves around them.
Personification (material objects gaining human-like qualities)
Macbeth, Othello, and Romeo and Juliet are some of his most famous works.
William Shakespeare
Red Balloon
IT
In case you need to explain your evidence, this "b" word is one of the best to signify the word support
Buttress (v)
A futuristic dystopian novel. Subtract 35 and you'll get there.
1989
*DOUBLE POINTS*
Boom, bam, tweet
Onomatopoeia (sounds that don't mean anything)
Romantic comedies as books. This lady basically started the genre, but she never married.
Jane Austen
Don't eat the chocolate pie, it might not be chocolate.
The Help
Sounds like something that meows. It often makes something go faster.
Catalyst
This novel uses animals to reflect the Soviet Union's government during the 1900s.
Animal Farm
Example: "Your mom will burn down the school if you do not get the trophy"
Hyperbole/Exxageration
Stephen King
Anyone wanna go to Singapore? Maybe you can meet the 1%
Crazy Rich Asians
A fancy "c" word for reason or opinion, usually used for debates.
Contention
White hats and red hooded cloaks are the most common fashion statement from this book
The Handmaiden's Tale
Big Baby
Jumbo Shrimp
Open Secret
Oxymoron (two words that are opposite form each other, but somehow work)
An angry green monster, a very crazy cat, and an orange man with a large moustache are all characters from this man's books.
Dr. Seuss
Anne Hathaway and Merryl Streep star in this movie all about the fashion industry
The Devil Wears Prada
This "r-word" is a subject area that typically means "the meaning of a text" or it could also be a synonym for "author's purpose"
Rhetoric