A lesson or moral a character learns in the story.
What is a theme?
An exaggeration to describe something that is impossible.
What is hyperbole?
A statement that tells us the authors opinion/judgment on a topic.
What is a claim?
To add, change or grow.
What is contribute?
The prefix meaning of re-.
What is do it again?
A character changes throughout the story.
When two or more words start with the same sound.
What is alliteration?
Text structure that shares why something happens and what happens as a result.
What is cause and effect?
To find or show understanding.
What is identify?
The prefix meaning of un-, dis-, in-, non-, im-
What is not?
The way a character acts, feels, thinks, and what they say and do.
A comparison of two things that are different by saying one thing is another thing.
What is a metaphor?
Text structure that compares similarities and differences on a topic.
What is comparison?
Put together using important details in a text to make a prediction.
What is inference (infer)?
The suffice meaning of -able.
What is ready to do something?
The most important events in a story, including plot and theme.
What is a summary?
Human characteristics are given to nonhuman things like plants, animals and objects.
What is personification?
Text structure where events are in order in which they happen (keywords, first, next, then, finally).
What is chronology (chronological)?
To prove, show or give evidence (proof).
What is support?
The suffix meaning of -ly.
What is in a certain way?
Characters, conflict, solution, rising action, setting, plot
What is parts of a non-fiction?
Uses like or as to compare two things
What is a simile?
Supports the topic or central idea.
What are relevant details?
To tell, justify, interpret.
What is explain?
The suffix meaning of -er, -or.
What is someone who does something?