This is what we call a 'paragraph' in poems.
What is a stanza?
What is the central/main idea?
This is the people and/or animals that take part in the action.
What are the characters?
This the end of the story.
What is the resolution?
This is a type of figurative language that compares two unlike objects using like or as.
What is a simile?
This is what we call the pattern of rhymes in a poem.
What is a rhyme scheme?
This is how the reader feels while reading a story?
What is mood?
This is the problem in the story.
What is the conflict?
This is the main action of the story; typically where the conflict occurs.
What is the climax?
This is a type of figurative language that expresses a situation that is the opposite of what you would expect.
What is irony?
This is a type of poem with no rhyme scheme or structure.
What is a free-verse poem?
This is another word for summarizing a text.
What is paraphrasing?
This is the location, time period, and weather of the story.
What is the setting?
What is the exposition?
This is a type of pronoun that emphasizes that someone/something is doing something alone - without anyone's help.
What is an intensive pronoun?
What is a tercet?
This is how the author feels throughout the story.
What is tone?
This is what happens in the story; it consists of the exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution.
What is the plot?
This is the part of the story that leads to the climax of the story, which depicts the actions leading to the conflict(s).
What is the rising action?
This is a type of pronoun that includes I, you, he, she, and they.
What is a subjective pronoun?
This is a line that repeats more than once in a poem.
What is a refrain?
Ethos, Pathos, & Logos are examples of these.
What are Rhetorical Appeals?
This is the lesson of the story.
What is the theme?
This is the part of the story that leads from the climax to the resolution, the events that help to end the story.
What is the falling action?
This is a type of pronoun that includes me, you, him, here, and them.
What is an objective pronoun?