Literary Terms
Figurative Language
Vocabulary
Grammar
Reading Comprehension
100

The perspective from which a story is told (e.g., first-person, third-person).

Point of View (POV)

100

A direct comparison between two things without using "like" or "as."

Metaphor

100

Using words, phrases, and sentences around an unknown word to figure out its meaning.

Context Clues

100

A word that describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb (often ending in -ly).

Adverb

100

Looking at a text to identify the who, what, when, where, and why.

Summary

200

The turning point or most intense, exciting moment in a story's plot.

Climax

200

Giving human qualities, emotions, or actions to non-human things or objects.

Personification

200

The feeling or emotion that a word creates (can be positive, negative, or neutral).

Connotation
200

A word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun.

Adjective

200

A logical conclusion based on evidence from the text and your own background knowledge.

Inference

300

A subtle hint or warning given by the author about something that will happen later in the story.

Foreshadowing

300

An extreme, obvious exaggeration used for emphasis or humor.

Hyperbole

300

Words that have the same or nearly the same meaning.

Synonyms

300

Action verbs or "to be" verbs (e.g., run, is, was, had) that express the main action or state of being.

Verb

300

Text that tells a made-up story from the author's imagination.

Fiction

400

The underlying message, lesson, or central idea of a story

Theme

400

A line or phrase in a poem that repeats the same consonant sound at the beginning of closely connected words.

Alliteration

400

Words that have opposite meanings.

Antonyms

400

Words that connect words, phrases, or clauses together (e.g., and, but, or, because).

Conjunction

400

Writing that is based on real facts, true events, and actual people.

Nonfiction

500

A character's struggles with an outside force like nature, another character, or society.

External Conflict

500

A sound word (like buzz, hiss, etc.)

Onomatopoeia

500

The root word in "autograph"

Graph

500

Identify the subject and verb in this sentence: The fluffy dog barked loudly

dog; barked (or fluffy dog)

500

The organizational pattern an author uses to write a text (e.g., cause and effect, sequence, or problem and solution).

Structure

M
e
n
u