Parts of Speech
Parts of Poetry
Type of Essay
Type of sentence
Singular or Plural Nouns
100

A word that describes a person, place, or thing.

Noun

100

This is a comparison between two unlike things using the words like or as

simile

100

To write about a personal experience or tell a story

Narrative

100

This sentence is made up of only one clause with a single subject and a single predicate.

Simple sentence

100

How would you write the word "sun" in the possessive form?

sun's

200

A word that describes a noun

adjective

200

This is a type of figurative language in which poets give an animal, object or idea human qualities.

personification

200

To write an essay describing a person, place or thing in great detail.

Descriptive

200

This sentences is a simple sentence that contains two subject nouns.

SCS or simple compound subject

200

How would you write women in the possessive form?

Women's

300

A word that describes action or an action word

verb

300

This is the use of words that sound like the noises they describe.

Onomatopoeia

300

To explain or inform about a certain subject

Informational or Explository.

300

This is an incomplete sentence

Fragment

300

How would you write ox in the possessive form?

ox's

400

A word that takes the place of a noun

pronoun

400

This is a group of lines in a poem set off by blank lines that usually develop one idea.

Stanza

400

To present a claim or a strong feeling about an issue

Persuasive or argumentative

400

This sentence is a simple sentence that contains two verbs.

SCV or simple compound verb

400

How would you write knives in the plural possessive form?

knives'

500

Words that sound the same, but are spelled differently and have different meanings

homonyms

500

This is the repetition of similar sounds.

Rhyme

500

This essay explains how two subjects are alike and how they are different.

Compare and Contrast

500

This sentence contains two stand alone sentences if the conjunction is removed.

Compound

500

How would you write children in the possessive form?

children's