THEME
Figurative Language
PASSSIVE VS ACTIVE
TEXT EVIDENCE
GRAMMAR & CONVENTIONS
100

The central message, moral, or "big idea" an author wants to share with the reader.

What is a theme

100

A comparison between two unlike things using the words "like" or "as."

What is a Simile?

100


In this voice, the subject of the sentence performs the action (e.g., "The chef prepared the meal").

What is Active Voice?

100

This is a direct word-for-word copy of text from a source, placed inside "quotation marks."

What is a direct quote?

100

This punctuation mark is used to separate two independent clauses that are closely related in thought.

What is a semicolon

200


A recurring idea like "love conquers all" that applies to people across all cultures and time periods.

What is a universal theme?

200


Giving human-like qualities or characteristics to non-human things, like "the wind whispered through the trees."

What is Personification?

200

In this voice, the subject receives the action, and the verb often includes a form of "to be" (e.g., "The meal was prepared").

What is passive voice

200

Writers use text evidence to do this to their arguments, ensuring their claims aren't just opinions.

What is support (or prove)?

200

This error occurs when two complete sentences are joined together with only a comma and no conjunction.

What is a comma splice

300


Authors often reveal the theme through this: the internal or external struggle that the main character must face.

What is the Conflict?

300

A comparison between two things that does NOT use "like" or "as," stating one thing is another

What is a Metaphor?

300

 "The ancient ruins were discovered by a group of hikers."

"What is Passive Voice?

300

This term refers to rewriting an author's ideas in your own words while still giving them credit. 

What is paraphrasing?

300

This grammatical error happens when a plural noun is paired with a singular verb, or vice versa.

What is a subject-verb agreement error?

400

This literary element, which is the author's attitude toward a subject, often helps the reader uncover the underlying theme."

What is tone

400

Words that imitate natural sounds, such as "buzz," "hiss," or "pop."

What is Onomatopoeia?

400


To change "The cake was eaten by the dog" into active voice, you would start the sentence with this noun.

What is the dog?

400

This is the formal term for giving credit to the original source, often appearing in parentheses after a quote.

What is a citation?














400

 This punctuation mark is used to introduce a list, an explanation, or a direct quote after an independent clause.

What is a colon?

500

A concrete object, person, or place in a story that represents an abstract idea—like a dove representing peace—is often used by authors to reinforce the story's theme."

What is a Symbol?

500

An extreme exaggeration used for emphasis or effect, like saying "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse."


What is Hyperbole?


500

Converting the passive sentence "The law was passed by the council" into this voice results in "The council passed the law."

Correct Response: What is active voice?

500


To reach a conclusion based on text evidence and your own background knowledge, you must make one of these.

What is an inference?

500

his error occurs when a verbal phrase starting with an "-ing" word or "to" modifies a subject that is completely missing from the sentence.

What is a dangling modifier?