Literary Terms
Story Elements
Figurative Langauage
Reading Comprehension
Writing Skills
100

This is the text that you are asked to read on the test. 

The passage

100

The turning point or moment of greatest tension in a story


Climax

100

Comparing two things using LIKE or AS


Simile

100

The attitude of a writer toward a subject


Tone

100

To arrive at a judgement or opinion by reasoning.


Conclude

200

This is a hint at what might happen later in the story. 

Foreshadowing

200

The events that happen in a story.


The plot. 

200

Saying one thing is something else to show a strong comparison


Metaphor

200

A conclusion a reader draws based on details in the text. It’s not directly stated

Inference

200

A short retelling of the most important parts of a text.

Summary

300

This is the way authors organize information in text.

Structure

300

An important disagreement or argument


Conflict. 

300

Giving human traits non-human things


Personification


300

A smaller story within a larger story used to develop a central idea

Anecdote

300

A statement or main idea that you are trying to prove in your writing.

A claim

400

This is the major lesson or idea found in a text.

Theme

400

The end of a story.

Resolution 

400

Words that start with the same sound 


Alliteration

400

A picture or drawing in a text that helps the reader understand the ideas, events, or information

Illustration
400

To find the similarities and differences between two or more things.

Compare and contrast. 

500

Name 4 different GENRES of writing. 

Nonfiction, Realistic Fiction, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Mystery, Adventure, Historical Fiction, Horror, Mythology, Folklore, Fables, Fairy Tales, Legends, Drama, Poetry

500

The opening of a story, introduces the setting and characters


Exposition

500

A phrase whose meaning is different from the literal meaning of the words.

Idiom

500

What are the three primary reasons an author creates a text? (think author's purpose)

To inform, to persuade, or to entertain. 
500

What must you do at the beginning of your writing? (3 things)

1. Turn the question around

2. Include the title of the passage

3. End your first sentence right after making your claim