This is a term comparing two or more things using "like" or "as"
What is a simile?
What are context clues?
This is the rhetorical appeal that is concerned with appealing to people's emotions
What is pathos?
This is the main argument throughout your essay
What is a thesis statement?
This is the term for a poem's paragraph
What is a stanza?
This is a term comparing two or more things without using "like or "as"
What is a metaphor?
This is the name of the rhyme scheme of a poem that does not rhyme
What is free verse?
This is the rhetorical appeal that is considered with the credibility of the author
What is ethos?
This part of an essay talks about what the other side believes
What is a counterargument?
Subjects and verbs must match in number
What is subject-verb agreement?
This is a word standing in for a sound
What is an onomatopoeia?
This is a another word for word choice
What is diction?
What is logos?
This part of an essay responds to the counterargument
What is the rebuttal?
The vibe or mood of a poem
What is tone?
This is a group of words that have no literal meaning, but a figurative one, like "raining cats and dogs"
What is an idiom?
This is an alternative name for "main idea," especially when dealing with poetry and non-fiction texts
What is a central idea?
This rhetorical appeal has to do with timeliness
What is kairos?
This is a question that shouldn't be answered, right?
What is a rhetorical question?
A rhyme with the same stressed vowel sound, e.g., "now" and "cow" or "gator" and "later"
What is an exact rhyme?
This is a figurative term for a reference to another text
What is allusion?
This is the repetition of consonant sounds in a poem, e.g., "Sally sells seashells by the seashore"
What is consonance?
The rhetorical appeal being used in the following example:
9 out of 10 dentists agree, brushing your teeth with rocks is not recommended.
What is logos?
What is a concession?
When the rhymes are similar, but aren't perfect, e.g., "wake" and "wait" or "clock" and "mohawk"
What is a slant rhyme?