Informational Texts
Vocabulary
Literary Texts
Figurative Language
Writing Process
100

What is the main idea of a text?

The most important point (or main message) the author wants you to understand. 

100

What does "context clues" mean?

Words or phrases surrounding an unfamiliar word that help you figure out its meaning.

100

What is a character?

 A person, animal, or creature in a story.

100

What is a simile?

A comparison between two things using "like" or "as."

100

 What is the first step of the writing process?

Prewriting/Planning (brainstorming ideas, organizing thoughts).

200

Name three text features used in informational texts

Headings, subheadings, captions, images, diagrams, graphs

200

Define the word "persevere."

 To continue trying even when something is difficult; to not give up.

200

What is the plot of a story?

The sequence of events that happen in a story (beginning, middle, end).

200

What is a metaphor? Give an example. 

A direct comparison between two things without using "like" or "as." Examples: "Time is money," "She is a star," etc.

200

What is the purpose of revising?

To make large changes to improve content, organization, and clarity.

300

What is the author's purpose?

The reason an author writes a text (to inform, persuade, entertain, or explain).

300

What is a synonym?

A word that means the same or nearly the same as another word.

300

What is the setting?

The time and place where a story takes place.

300

What is personification?

Giving human qualities or characteristics to non-human things or animals.

300

What is the difference between revising and editing?

Revising changes content and organization; editing fixes grammar, punctuation, and spelling.

400

What is a summary?

A brief restatement of the most important points in a text using your own words.

400

Define the word "resilient."

Able to recover quickly from difficulties; tough and flexible.

400

What is a theme?

 The main message or lesson a story teaches readers.

400

 What is an idiom? Give an example.

 A phrase or expression that means something different from the literal meaning of the words. Examples: "raining cats and dogs," "break a leg," "piece of cake," etc.

400

Name three strategies for prewriting. 

Brainstorming, outlining, clustering, listing, freewriting, etc. 

500

What is the difference between a fact and an opinion?

A fact can be proven true or false; an opinion is a belief or judgment that cannot be proven.


500

What is an antonym? Give an example.

A word that means the opposite of another word. Examples: hot/cold, big/small, happy/sad, etc.

500

What is the conflict in a story?

The main problem or struggle the character faces that drives the plot forward.

500

What is hyperbole?

An extreme exaggeration used for emphasis or effect (e.g., "I've told you a million times!").

500

What is peer review?

Having another person read and give feedback on your writing before final submission.