This is the inciting incident.
What is Victor wants to take French because Teresa is in French class
This is the definition of a simile.
What is a comparison using like or as?
Name the characters of this short story.
What is: Victor, Teresa, Michael, Mr. Bueller
Victor was taking French as this type of class.
What is his elective?
Starting with a B
What is to bluff?
This is the reason Michael scowls at girls.
He read a GQ magazine and noticed how the male models scowled.
What is a comparison that does NOT use like or as?
This is the author of "Seventh Grade"
What is Gary Soto
This is a way that the author and Victor might be similar.
What is the both lived in Fresno, CA growing up.
This is scowling.
What is to look angry by drawing your eyebrows together and frowning?
This happened when Victor tried scowling.
An overexaggeration.
What is hyperbole?
This is the setting.
A middle school in Fresno, CA on the first day of7th grade.
This is what the A in ACE stands for.
What is Answer the question succinctly, restating the question in your answer?
A strong belief, or assuredness.
Starting with a C
What is conviction?
This is the climax of the story.
What is when Victor doesn't get found out for not being able to take French and Teresa believes he is good at it.
This is a comparison by attributing human characteristics to something non-human.
What is personification?
This is the main type of conflict in this story.
What is person vs. self?
This is what the C in ACE stands for.
What is Cite text evidence in your answer?
Extreme fierceness; intensity.
Starting with a F
What is ferocity?
This could be considered the resolution.
Victor deciding that considering what has happened so far, he's going to like being in the seventh grade.
These are hints that an author gives to help define a difficult or unusual word within a book.
What are context clues?
This is the point of view Seventh Grade is told in.
What is third-person omniscient?
The E in ACE stands for this.
What is Explain your answer (elaborate or expand when necessary)?
With a bashful or embarrassed look.
Starts with an S
What is sheepishly/