FICTION
NONFICTION
VOCABULARY
LITERARY ELEMENTS
RESEARCH
100

This is the most important idea or lesson in a story.

theme

100

Why might an author include a heading and subheadings in a nonfiction text?

organize information and help the reader locate key ideas

100

Clues in a sentence or paragraph that help you figure out a word’s meaning are called this.

context clues?


100

This is the person who tells the story.

narrator

100

This tool helps you find the meaning of words.

Dictionary

200

When a reader uses clues from the text and their own thinking to understand something not directly stated, they are doing this.

Inference 

200

How does a cause-and-effect text structure help the reader understand a topic?

it shows how one event leads to another

200

A word that has the opposite meaning of another word is called this.

antonym

200

This is the main character in a story.

Protagonist

200

Taking someone else’s work and using it as your own is called this.

Plagarism

300

This type of conflict happens between a character and another character.

character vs. Character

300

This text structure shows how two or more things are alike and different.

Compare & Contrast

300

The base word “happy” becomes “unhappy.” This prefix means this.

not

300

A narrator describes only one character’s thoughts and feelings using “he” or “she.” This point of view is:

3rd Person

300

Information taken directly from a source should be placed inside these.

Quotation Marks ""

400

If a story is told by a narrator using “I” or “we,” it is written in this point of view.

first person

400

What are the 3 types of author's purposes?

inform, persuade, or entertain

400

The root “bio” means this.

life

400

If a character says one thing but means the opposite, the author is using this literary device.

Irony

400

Why is it important to use multiple sources when researching a topic?

ensure accuracy and avoid bias

500

This is how a character changes or grows throughout a story.

character development

500

When a reader decides if a source is trustworthy, they are evaluating this.

credibility (or reliability)

500

A comparison using “like” or “as” is called this.

simile

500

How does a character’s actions across a story most clearly reveal theme?

showing the lesson or message through their choices and growth?

500

This is a list of sources used in a research project.

bibliography (or works cited page)