Parts of Speech & Types of Words
Prove It
Story Time
Text Structure
Figurative Language
Literary Terms
100

Person, place, thing, or idea

noun

100
Proof, usually from a text

Evidence

100

To make a brief statement of the main ideas

summarize

100

What is the central idea?

what the text is about in one sentence

100

comparing two unlike terms using the words "like" or "as"

simile

100

An educated guess

Inference

200

a word that means the same

synonym

200

Copying someone else's work without giving them credit

Plaigarism

200

Talking between two characters

dialogue

200

the order in which things happen

sequence of events

200

BOOM!

BUZZ!

POW!

onomatopoeia

200

What the author is trying to prove in a text

claim

300

A word that means the opposite

antonym

300

What does "justify" mean?

Proving a claim to be correct

300

The problem the main character is facing

conflict

300

The reason something happens

cause

300

giving human characteristics to a nonhuman thing

personification

300

The author's reason for writing

Author's purpose

400

A word that modifies a verb

adverb

400
Putting evidence into your own words, but still giving credit to the author

Paraphrase

400

The end result or resolution

Conclusion

400

to state the similarities and differences of two things

compare and contrast

400

making an exaggerated claim

hyperbole

400
What does "revise" mean?

to make corrections

500

word that modifies a noun

adjective

500

Where information comes from

A source

500
What is a protagonist?

The main character in a story

500

The way in which text is connected together, arranged, or organized

Text Structure

500

a sentence or phrase that cannot be literally translated

idiom

500

the "secret message" the author is communicating

theme

600

Clues within a text that help us to better understand

Context Clues

600

If a source is reliable or trustworthy, we call it _______.

Credible

600

A written account events

narrative writing

600

Shows major or minor details about a topic

Descriptive

600

phrases that use contradictory terms

oxymoron

600

The author's attitude toward the topic

tone

700

First, next, and finally are examples of what?

Transition words

700

A source that was created at the time of an event

Primary source

700

to provide evidence for a claim

support

700

Informs the reader about a topic or event

Informative writing

700

repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words

alliteration

700

a group of lines within a poem

stanza

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