grammar
argument writing
Narrative/poetry
vocabulary
cleverli
100

a punctuation mark at the end of a sentence

period

100

what is accurate, trustworthy, and appropriate for your specific need.

good source

100

the central idea, underlying message, or deeper meaning explored in a creative work

theme

100

Not well-known, uncertain, or difficult to understand

obscure

100

How do you start a link.

Hence, Therfore, Thus

200

a punctuation mark that links two closely related independent clauses within a single sentence

semicolon

200

a statement that acknowledges the opposing side of your argument

counter claim

200

a literary device used to introduce background information about events, settings, and characters to the audience

exposition

200

Able to recover quickly from difficult conditions or setbacks

resilient

200

what is clear, specific, argumentative (not a plain fact), and supported by evidence and reasoning

A claim

300

anything that comes before something else, particularly something that serves as a cause

antecedents

300

a brief, engaging story about a real incident or event, often used to entertain, illustrate a specific point, or make an abstract idea more relatable

anecdote

300

a conversation between two or more people, or the spoken lines exchanged by characters in a book, movie, or play

dialogue

300

Showing great attention to detail; very careful and precise

meticulous

300

length of each paragraph

3 to 6 sentences

400

an indirect or passing reference to a person, place, event, or artistic work

allusion

400

a clear, concise sentence that summarizes the main point or central claim of an essay or research paper

thesis statementy

400

 a contrast or incongruity between what is expected and what actually occurs

irony

400

Having or showing an ability to accurately assess situations and turn them to one's advantage; very clever

Astute

400

How do you cite a source

the authors name and the paragraph
500

the emotional or cultural meaning a word suggests beyond its literal, dictionary definition

connotation

500

what is the act of using another person's words, ideas, or intellectual property and presenting them as your own without giving proper credit to the original creator

plagiarism

500

a figure of speech that uses extreme, deliberate exaggeration to emphasize a point, evoke strong emotions, or add humor

hyperbole

500

Making one feel very happy, animated, or full of excitement.

Exhilarating

500

what is the cognitive process of using existing knowledge, facts, and logic to draw conclusions, make predictions, or construct explanations

reasoning