Themes, Big Ideas, and BONUSES
POV and Perspective
Figurative Language
Arguments
Word Meaning
100

Unlike a topic (like "war"), this is a complete message or lesson the author wants you to learn.

What is a theme?

100

This point of view uses pronouns like "I," "me," and "my."

What is 1st person?

100

"The classroom was a zoo" is an example of this figure of speech.

What is a metaphor?

100

This is the main position or viewpoint an author takes in an argumentative text.

What is a claim?

100

These are the clues found around an unknown word in a sentence that help you figure out its meaning.

What are context clues?

200

This is the main point of an informational text, which can be stated directly or suggested.

What is the central idea?

200

When a story switches between different characters telling the story, it is using this technique.

What is multiple narrators or multiple point of view?

200

"Sally sold seashells by the seashore" uses this repetitive sound device.

What is alliteration?

200

A commercial using a famous doctor to sell a vitamin is using this rhetorical appeal (credibility).

What is ethos?

200

This refers to the emotional "feeling" or "vibe" a word carries (positive, negative, or neutral).

What is connotation?

300

a caffeinated beverage consumed by Mrs. Buhrman every morning

What is coffee?

300

If one author writes to persuade and another writes to inform about the same topic, they have different types of this.

What is author's purpose?

300

This is an extreme exaggeration, such as saying "I've told you a million times!"

What is hyperbole?

300

An ad showing a sad puppy to get you to donate money is using this rhetorical appeal (emotion).

What is pathos?

300

This common prefix, found in words like pregame and preheat, means "before."

What is pre-?

400

BUHRMAN'S BONUS: In literature, this creature is often used as a symbol of freedom and power. If you add the suffix "-s" to this bird's name and pair it with the "City of Brotherly Love," you get the name of this NFL team.

What are the Philadelphia Eagles?

400

This narrator knows the thoughts and feelings of all characters in the story.

What is 3rd person omniscient?

400

igurative language helps establish this—the author's attitude toward the subject.

What is tone?

400

Using facts, data, and "if-then" statements is an example of this type of reasoning.

What is logos or logical reasoning?

400

Adding these prefixes changes a base word to its opposite meaning.

What is un- or dis-?

500

This number is found by taking the Latin root "bi-"  and adding it to the Latin root "dec-". In literature, it is also the total number of "Districts" originally featured in the Hunger Games series.Also, the number of years Mrs. Buhrman has been teaching.

What is 12?

500

A shift in point of view can change the reader's "distance" from the story, often affecting this—the emotional atmosphere of the text.

What is mood?

500

"Piece of cake" or "under the weather" are examples of this type of phrase where the meaning is different from the literal words.

What is an idiom?

500

This is a statement that addresses the "other side" of an argument.

What is counter argument?

500

Combining a suffix (-less) and root word, which means without fear

What is fearless?

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