Hodgepodge
ELA & Reading
Figurative Language
Related to Poetry
Fiction Signposts
100

Ms. Fish's dog's name

Stella

100

An overview of what a piece of writing is about.

Summary

100

When something is said to be something else.

Metaphor

100

The way lines in a poem are grouped. 

Stanza

100

When a word, line, or event happens repeatedly.

Again and again

200

Ms. Evan's dog's name.

Jax (Jackson)

200

This type of writing includes a claim statement and a thesis. 

Argumentative

200

An extreme exaggeration

Hyperbole

200

The repeated beginning consonant sound of words close to each other. 

Alliteration

200

When a character says or does something that’s the opposite of what he has been saying or doing all along.

Contrast and Contradictions

300

The three ladies of the media center.

Ms. Voltz, Ms, Ryan, Ms. Starker

300
Three subject pronouns are:

I, me, we, our.

300

A word that imitates the sound it makes. 

Onomatopoeia

300

The use of stressed and unstressed syllables to create a beat, specifically in poetry in verse form.

Rhythm or meter.

300

When the character asks himself a really difficult question.

Tough question

400

SOAR stands for...

success, optimistic, aware, responsible

400

Providing hints or clues of what may be coming up in a story.

Foreshadowing.

400

When human characteristics are given to nonhuman things.

Personification

400

Two or more words with similar-sounding end syllables placed to echo one another.

End rhyme.

400

When a character (who’s probably older and lots wiser) takes the main character aside and gives serious advice.

Words of the Wiser

500

Mr. Whiting has a huge collection of these:

Minions

500
The four types of literary conflicts.

Man vs. Man, Man vs. Nature, Man vs. Self, Man vs. society.

500

A phrase that does not reflect its literal meaning.

Idiom

500

Rhyme within the same line of a poem.

Internal rhyme

500

When a character realizes, understands, or finally figures something out

Aha moment

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