Reading & Literature
Figurative Language
Rhetoric
Writing
Grammar
100

The lesson readers can learn from a work of literature

What is the theme?

NOT to be confused with main idea

100

A type of figurative language that compares two things without the use of "like" or "as"

What is a metaphor?

NOT to be confused with simile

100

The rhetorical appeal that appeals to people's emotions

What is pathos?

100
An assertion that directly answers the prompt

What is a claim?

100

A reference book of synonyms and antonyms

What is a thesaurus?


200

A logical assumption based on evidence

What is an inference?

200

An exaggeration

What is a hyperbole?

200

The rhetorical appeal that appeals to credibility

What is ethos?
200

The two pieces of information that are required for an MLA-formatted in-text citation

What is the author's last name and the page number?

200
The POV that is used when the narrator knows all the characters' thoughts and feelings

What is third-person omniscient?

300

These are the five parts of a plot.

What are the exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution?

300

"The big, bright, blinding sun had quite the effect on my sight" is an example of this type of figurative language

3 acceptable answers!

What is alliteration?

What is consonance?

What is assonance?

300

This is the purpose of rhetoric

What is "to effectively inform, persuade, or entertain an audience"?
300

This part of writing explains how the evidence proves the claim to be true.

What is reasoning?

300

A punctuation mark that is used to combine two independent clauses without a conjunction

What is a semicolon?
400

This is used to show the reader a character's traits without directly telling them

What is indirect characterization?

400

"SPLASH!" is an example of this type of figurative language.

What is an onomatopoeia?

400

A rhetorical device that juxtaposes two contrasting words to impact the meaning or appeal of a text

What is antithesis?

400

When you integrate a quote into your own sentence, instead of writing a quote without context; it's best practice

What is quote blending?
400

These are the four types of sentence structures.

What are simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences?

Simple sentences = one independent clause

Compound sentences = 2+ independent clauses w/ conjunction(s)

Complex sentences = independent clause + 1+ dependent clauses 

Compound-complex = at least two independent clauses and one dependent clause

500

This type of literature traditionally focuses on external terror/supernatural forces to evoke fear; in the modern day, it focuses on internal horrors, psychological trauma, and alienation to elicit its themes

What is Gothic Literature?

500

The emotional meaning or "vibe" behind a word, rather than its literal meaning

What is connotation?

500

A rhetorical device in which the same word/phrase is repeated multiple times, but only at the beginning of a sentence/paragraph

What is anaphora?

NOT to be confused with repetition

500

The type of evidence that is based on personal experiences

What is anecdotal evidence?

500

A type of clause that can exist as its own sentence

Independant Clause