Elements of Literature 1
Elements of Literature 2
Figurative Language
Academic Vocabulary
Expository Writing
100
The person telling the story.
Who is the Narrator?
100
Time and place of a story: when and where.
What is setting?
100
An object that stands for something else, such as a larger idea.
What is symbolism?
100
The reason the author wrote the piece.
What is author's purpose?
100
The first sentence of the essay that grabs the readers' attention.
What is a hook?
200
How the reader feels in response to the text.
What is mood?
200
The problem that drives the story and creates the action.
What is conflict?
200

comparison of two things using the words like or as

What is simile?

200
Positive or negative emotions associated with a word based on the context in which it is used.
What is connotation?
200
To improve by making changes.
What is revise?
300
The author's attitude toward the topic.
What is tone?
300
The universal lesson, moral, or message the reader should learn from a story.
What is theme?
300
Painting a picture using the five senses.
What is imagery?
300
Examples/evidence that reinforces the thesis.
What is support?
300
To move smoothly from one topic to the next.
What is a transition?
400

the problem of the story

What is conflict. 

400

The events that make up a story.

What is the plot?

400

Comparison of two things not using like or as. 

What is metaphor 

400
Take it apart and examine the pieces closely.
What is analyze?
400
To say again.
What is restate?
500
The narrator is a character in the story (characterized by the use of I, me, and my).
What is 1st person point of view?
500
The narrator is outside the story (characterized by the use of he, she, they, them, etc.)
What is 3rd person point of view?
500
A reference to a historical, mythological, or cultural event or person.
What is allusion?
500
Use clues to come to a conclusion.
What is inference (to infer)?
500
Where you restate your thesis and a summary of main points.
What is a conclusion?