Pronouns
Participles
Text Evidence
Grammar Police
Mixed Bag
100

This type of pronoun, such as "mine" or "theirs," indicates ownership.

Possessive 

100

Identify the participle in the following sentence: 

"The police found the stolen car in the alley."

Stolen

100

When answering a question about a text, you should always do this to show where your information came from.

Cite it.

100

This crime happens when two or more independent clauses are put together without proper punctuation.

A Run-On Sentence
100

This is the dictionary definition of a word, rather than the "feeling" or "vibe" associated with it.

Denotation

200

Use this type of pronoun when it is the one performing the action in a sentence

Subject Pronoun

200

In the sentence "The cracked mirror hung on the wall next to the shelf," what noun does the participle describe?

Mirror

200

These marks must be placed around any words taken directly from the text.

Quotation Marks

200

Pronouns must match their antecedents in gender, number, and ______________.

Person 

200

This is the perspective from which a story is told, such as first-person or third-person.

Point of View

300

This is the error that occurs when a pronoun does not clearly refer to one specific noun.

Vague Pronoun

300

What is the participle phrase in the following sentence?

Running toward the finish line, the athlete felt a burst of energy.

Running toward the finish line

300

This is a conclusion (or educated guess) reached by combining what you already know with evidence from the text.

Inference

300
Names of specific people, places, and things (such as Paris, France or Lafayette Middle School) must always be capitalized because they are each this type of noun.

Proper Noun

300

This is the central message or "moral" the author wants the reader to take away from a story.

Theme

400

"This," "that," "these," and "those" belong to this pronoun category because they point out specific things.

Demonstrative Pronouns

400

True or False? In the sentence "Walking to school, the rain started to fall," the participle phrase is a "dangling modifier" because the rain isn't actually walking.

True

400

These are the words or phrases around a difficult word that you use to help you figure out its meaning.

Context Clues

400

This is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.

Dependent (or Subordinate) Clause

400

Rewrite this sentence and change it to active voice: "The cake was eaten by the dog."

The dog ate the cake.

500

Pronouns like "everyone" and "somebody", because of how many people they refer to, always have to be paired with what type of verb.

Singular

500

What type of participle is the word "tired" in the phrase "the tired hikers"?

Past participle

500

When an author uses facts, statistics, or expert quotes, they are trying to provide evidence for their _________.

Claim

500

The most common non-action verbs, including "am," "is," "are," "was," and "were" are these types of verbs.

Linking/"Be" Verbs/Forms of "Be"

500

In this voice, the subject of the sentence is the one performing the action (e.g., "The chef cooked the meal")

Active Voice