These two letters can make 3 different sounds (/d/, /t/, /id/) at the end of a past-tense word.
What is -ed?
The true pieces of information in the text.
What are facts?
A person, place or thing.
What is a noun?
The back page of the book that tells you what the bolded words mean.
What is the Glossary?
When a character is telling the story.
What is First Person Point of View?
This phonogram card makes 3 sounds (/oo/, /u/, /o/)
What is -oo?
What is the Table of Contents?
A word that describes a noun.
What is an adjective?
To die out; there are no more left.
What is extinct?
The order in which the story is told.
What is sequencing?
This phonogram makes the sounds /er/ and /ar/.
What is -ear?
Grand Central Station is an example of this type of noun.
What is a proper noun?
To be in danger of dying out; not many left.
Where the story takes place.
What is the Setting?
The words spinning and filled follow this spelling rule.
What is doubling the consonant before adding -ing or -ed?
The sentence that tells what the topic is mostly about.
What is the Main Idea?
Benches and foxes have this in common.
What are plural nouns ending with sh, ch, x, ss, zz or s?
What is an antonym?
Taking what the author tells you and using what you already know to figure out what is happening in the book.
What is inferencing?
The letters wr come together to make this sound.
What is the sound /r/?
The bolded words at the top of each page. They are also the section titles.
Two words that mean the same.