It introduces key issues/summary of the topic
opening paragraph
Comparing two things without using the words "like" or "as".
Metaphor
Words that end with the same sound.
Rhymes
if you tie a _____ in a piece of string, you pass one end through a loop and pull it tight.
knot
Causing disagreement or discussion
contraversial
main part of the balanced argugment
arguments for and against (supported by extra information)
Comparing two things using the words “like” or “as.”
Simile
It occurs when poets repeat words, phrases, or lines in a poem
Repetition
_____ umbrella did I take?
Whose
A feeling or opinion about something or someone
attitude
Which is the correct tense used in a balanced argument?
Present tense
It gives human traits and feelings to things that are not human – like animals or objects.
Personification
It is the repetition of the first consonant sound in words, as in the nursery rhyme “Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.”
Alliteration
If you describe something as ______, you mean it is dirty and smells or tastes unpleasant
foul
If you are uncertain about something, you are...
doubtful
What does the conclusion do?
it summarises the key points of the topic
... the use of words to create pictures, or images, in your mind.
Imagery
Words that represent the actual sound of something. Dogs “bark,” cats “purr,” thunder “booms,” rain “drips,” and the clock “ticks.”
Onomatopoeia
An amount obtained as a result of adding numbers is called a _______
sum
When you are causing, involving or likely to cause disagreement, you are ______
contensious
When can I give my personal opinion in a balanced argument?
In the conclusion.
Tools that writers use to create images, or “paint pictures,” in your mind.
Figures of speech
The speaker in a poem. The speaker can be the poet himself or a character he created in the poem. There can be one speaker or many speakers.
Voice
A person, who professes or is supposed to practice magic is called a _______
witch
To think that something is true correct or real
to believe