This technique makes a comparison between two different things.
What is a simile?
This acronym helps us keep writing structured.
What is TEEL?
What is; Let's eat, grandma!
This type of word is used to describe an action.
What is an adverb?
This children's book has sold the most copies in the world
What is The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry?
Harry Potter is second runner up!
This technique directly calls one thing another thing.
This type of word changes the strength of a statement
What is high modality
This word joins two clauses together, like "because" or "although."
What is a conjunction?
This word describes someone who has big goals and works towards them (hint, a spelling word from last term)
What is ambitious?
This type of writing is Catherine's least favourite.
What is poetry?
This technique gives human qualities to non-human things
What is personification?
This part of a persuasive text uses facts and numbers to support an argument.
This grammar form changes when something occured.
What is tense?
This word means the opposite of "literal" and is often used in poetry.
What is figurative?
This author wrote Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Who is Roald Dahl?
This is the moment of greatest tension or turning point in a story.
What is the climax?
This technique asks a question without expecting an answer.
What is rhetorical question?
This type of sentence gives a command.
What is an imperative sentence?
This is a group of words that means something different than the individual words suggests.
What is an idiom? (E.g spill the beans, hold your horses)
This punctuation mark is often overused in dramatic writing!!!
What is the exclamation mark?
This type of conflict happens inside a character's mind.
What is internal conflict?
This technique appeals to the audience’s emotions.
What is pathos?
This punctuation mark is used to indicate possession.
What is an apostrophe?
This type of word expresses emotion and is often followed by an exclamation mark (e.g., "Wow!").
What is an interjection?
This word is very frequently used by your tutor.
What is unfortunately?