Figurative Language
Plot
Conventions
Miscellaneous
100

Define Simile

Comparing two things using like or as

100

What's the first part of the plot?

Exposition.

100

What's a noun?

A person, place, or a thing.

100

Where did Ms. Lindsey move from?

Florida

200

Define Metaphor

Comparing two things without using like or as?

200

What's the second part of plot?

Rising action.

200

What's a verb?

An action.

200

Look around the room; what are the 9 parts of speech?

noun, adjective, adverb, conjunction, pronoun, verb, preposition, interjection, and article.

300
"I'm so hungry I could eat a horse" is an example of which figurative language type?

Hyperbole

300

What's the third part or the most exciting part of the plot?

Climax.

300

What's an independent clause?

A clause that can stand on it's own or be a sentence.

300

What was the title of the first story we read?

"The Last Dog"

400

Write an example of personification.

Answers may vary.

400

What happens in the fourth part of the plot?

Falling action.

400

What's a dependent clause?

A clause that can not stand by itself.

400

What is the name of the last poem we read?

Science Fiction Cradlesong 

OR

First Men on the Moon

500

Spell the word CORRECTLY for the type of figurative language that describes SOUND. 

BOOM, Screech, pop are examples

ONOMATOPOEIA 

500

What's the final part of the plot when everything is tied together?

Resolution. 

500

DAILY DOUBLE:

When do you appropriately use a semicolon?

When you have two independent clauses with no coordinating conjunction like and or but.

500

DAILY DOUBLE

What is the RACE strategy and how do we use it

Restate, answer, cite, and explain

You should use it when constructing responses.