Figurative Language
Sound Devices
Structure & other
Persusaive Texts
Informational Text
100

A comparison using like or as.

Simile

100

Repetition of the same beginning sound in words close together.

Alliteration

100

A single row of words in a poem.

Line

100

The intended readers or listeners of a text.

Audience

100

The main argument or position an author is trying to prove.

Claim

200

A comparison that says one thing is another.

Metaphor

200

Repetition of similar ending sounds in words.

Rhyme

200

A group of lines in a poem, like a paragraph.

Stanza

200

The explanation that shows how evidence supports a claim.

Reasoning

200

The author’s reason for writing (to inform, persuade, entertain).

Author’s Purpose

300

An exaggeration used for emphasis or effect.

Hyperbole

300

Repeating words or phrases for emphasis or effect.

Repetition

300

How a text is organized (cause/effect, compare/contrast, etc.).

Text Structure

300

Writing that uses humor or exaggeration to criticize something.


 Satire

300

An opposing argument to the main claim.

Counterclaim

400

Two contradictory words placed together (jumbo shrimp).

Oxymoron

400

A word that imitates a sound (buzz, bang).

Onomatopoeia

400

To restate ideas in your own words without changing the meaning.

Paraphrase

400

 A one-sided or unfair viewpoint.

Bias

400

Facts, examples, or quotes used to back up a claim.

Supporting Evidence

500

Giving human qualities to nonhuman things.

Personification

500

An author’s word choice.

Diction

500

(Informational Text) A comparison that explains an idea by showing how it is similar to something else. 

Analogy

500


Language used to persuade or influence an audience.

Rhetoric

500

The ending section that summarizes or reinforces the main ideas.

Conclusion

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