Grammar
Basics
Figurative
Language
Elements
of a Plot
Literary
Concepts
100

This part of the sentence tells us who or what the sentence is about.

What is the subject?

100

Boom!

What is onomatopoeia?

100

The introduction of a story tells about the main characters, setting, and background information necessary to understand the story's conflict and plot.

What is the exposition?

100

This is the central message or main idea that an author wants to convey.

What is the theme?

200

In the sentence "The students studied hard," identify the predicate.

What is "studied hard"?

200

The wind whistled through the trees. 

What is personification?

200

The most exciting part of the story.

What is climax?

200

When an author directly tells you "She was kind and generous," this is called this type of characterization.

What is direct characterization?

300

This type of word represents a person, place, thing, or idea.

What is a noun?

300

She sings like an angel.

What is a simile?

300

Events that led up to the climax of a story.

What is rising action?

300

Name three ways indirect characterization can reveal character traits.

What are speech, thoughts, effects on others, actions, and looks?

400

In "The brave knight fought the dragon," name two nouns.

What are "knight" and "dragon"?

400

I called you a million-times last night.

What is a hyperbole?

400

The end of the story resolves the conflict.

What is resolution?

400

The person or character telling the story.

What is the narrator?

500

Identify the subject and predicate in: "My favorite book sits on the shelf."

What are "My favorite book" (subject) and "sits on the shelf" (predicate)

500

"As clear as mud."  

What is verbal irony?

500

Events that happen after the climax.

What is falling action?

500

This type of conflict occurs when a character struggles against an outside force, such as another character or nature.

What is an external conflict?

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