Parts of Speech
Punctuation Power
Sentence Structure
Tenses and Verbs
Figurative Language
100

What part of speech describes a noun?

Adjective

100

What punctuation mark ends a declarative sentence?

Period

100

What type of sentence asks a question?

Interrogative

100

What is the past tense of “run”?

Ran

100


What type of figurative language compares two things using “like” or “as”?

Simile

200

Identify the part of speech: “quickly”

Adverb

200

What do we call the punctuation marks used to separate items in a list?

Commas

200

Identify the subject in this sentence: “The dog chased the cat.”

The dog

200

Change “She will eat” to the present tense.

She eats

200


What is it called when you give human qualities to non-human things?

Personification

300

What part of speech is a word that shows an action or state of being?

Verb

300

Which punctuation mark is used to show possession or in contractions?

Apostrophe

300

What do we call a sentence that has two independent clauses joined by a conjunction?

Compound sentence

300

What is the future tense of “swim”?

Will swim

300

Identify the figurative language: “The snow was a white blanket over the town.”

Metaphor

400

Which part of speech connects words, phrases, or clauses?

Conjunction

400

Where does a comma go in this sentence? “After school I went to the park.”

After “school”

400

Identify the predicate in this sentence: “The students finished their homework.”

Finished their homework

400

Identify the verb tense: “They had finished their project.”

Past perfect

400

What type of figurative language is this: “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers”?

Alliteration

500

Identify the part of speech: “Wow!”

Interjection

500

What punctuation goes at the end of an exclamatory sentence?

Exclamation mark

500

What kind of sentence is this: “Because it was raining, we stayed inside.”

Complex sentence

500


Change this sentence to present progressive tense: “He plays soccer.”

He is playing soccer.

500

Identify the figurative language: “Boom! Crack! The thunder roared.”

Onomatopoeia

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