What is the setting of a story?
Where/when the story takes place
When a narrator uses "I, Me," it is written in this point of view
First Person
What should an engaging introduction include?
A) A hook, background information, and a thesis statement
B) Random facts and a question
C) Only a thesis statement
D) A long, unrelated story
A) A hook, background information, and a thesis statement
What is the opening paragraph to your writing called?
The closing, the introduction, or the body?
Introduction
What is the theme of a story?
the lesson or moral of a story
The problem of the story
Which figurative language term is used when a statement is exaggerated for emphasis, like "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse"?
Hyperbole
What is the rhetorical appeal PATHOS?
Using emotional language to persuade someone
She is busy as a bee.
What is the pronoun in the sentence?
She
What is text evidence?
What's the difference between an internal and external conflict?
Internal = person vs. self
External = person vs. outside force
When the narrator uses "She, He, they" it is written in this perspective
Third Person
Identify the point of view used in this sentence:
"You should always check both ways before crossing the street."
Second-person point of view
Which point of view allows the narrator to describe the thoughts and feelings of multiple characters?
Third-person omniscient
What is dependent clause?
Has a subject and verb, but does not express a complete thought
Which word in the sentence is the pronoun:
"Ms. S. was so excited to teach her students this new lesson."
her
What a nonfiction text is mostly about?
Facts or real events
What is a verb?
What are the verbs in this sentence:
She watched him play at the park.
watched and play
Name 3 adjectives
description words
What are the five paragraphs of an argumentative essay called?
1. Intro
2. Body Paragraph 1
3. Body Paragraph 2
4. Counterclaim
5. Conclusion
What is at the top of the plot mountain?
Climax
What is the last sentence of your introduction paragraph called?
Thesis Statement
Which figurative language term refers to words that imitate natural sounds, like "buzz," "crash," and "sizzle"?
Onomatopoeia
What is symbolism? Give an example.
When one thing represents another thing. A red heart symbolizes love.