Figurative Language
Characterization
Rhetorical Appeals
Tone
Mood
100

Identify the figurative device: "Time is a thief that steals our days."

Metaphor (time compared to a thief).

100

What is direct characterization? Give a one-sentence example.

Direct: author states traits (e.g., "John was generous.").

100

Define ethos. Give a classroom-appropriate example of its use in a speech.

Ethos: credibility (e.g., teacher cites research).

100

Define "tone" in literature. How does it differ from mood?

 Tone = author's attitude; differs from mood (reader's feeling).

100

Define "mood" in literature and name two elements that help establish it.

Mood = atmosphere; set by setting, diction, imagery.

200

Explain how a simile differs from a metaphor and provide an original example of each.

Simile uses "like" or "as"; metaphor states direct comparison. Example simile: "Her smile was like sunrise." Metaphor: "Her smile was sunrise."

200

What is indirect characterization? List two methods authors use to reveal a character indirectly.

 Indirect: speech, actions, thoughts, appearance, other characters' reactions.

200

Define pathos and explain why it is powerful in persuasive writing.

Pathos: emotional appeal (evokes sympathy).

200

 Identify the tone in this sentence: "He announced the results with a triumphant grin and a mocking bow."

Tone = mocking or triumphant.

200

Identify the mood created by: "Fog clung to the alleyways as distant bells tolled."

Mood = eerie or ominous.

300

 Read the line: "The thunder grumbled like an old man." Identify the device and explain its effect on the passage's imagery

Simile; creates vivid, relatable sound image.

300

Read this brief excerpt: "She left her umbrella at the café three times this month and still insisted the weather loved her." Describe what this suggests about the character using indirect characterization.

Suggests optimism or denial; shows habits and attitude via actions.

300

Define logos. Identify a clear example of logos in an editorial (describe the kind of evidence you would expect).

Logos: logical evidence (statistics, facts).

300

Describe one technique writers use to create tone and give an example sentence showing that technique.

Technique: diction (e.g., formal word choice creates serious tone). Example: "The committee deliberated with solemn gravity."

300

Explain how diction and setting combine to create mood; give a brief two-sentence example.

Diction + setting example: "Rain-slick streets" + "dim streetlights" = gloomy mood.

400

Define personification and analyze how personification can shape a reader's understanding of a nonhuman element in a poem. Provide a short example.

Personification; gives human traits to nonhuman object to create connection (example: "The wind whispered secrets").

400

Explain round vs. flat characters and identify which type typically undergoes change over the course of a story.

Round = complex and changeable; flat = simple and unchanging. Round characters typically change.  

400

A speaker uses a credible source, shares a moving personal story, and shows statistical evidence. Label each tactic with the correct appeal (ethos, pathos, logos).

Logos: logical evidence (statistics, facts).

400

What is the tone of your lit. circle book?

[answers vary - Mrs. Samuel will approve]

400

What is the mood of Night?

[answers will vary -  Mrs. Samuel will approve]

500

Identify the literary device used when an author deliberately understates a situation (e.g., saying "It's just a scratch" about serious damage). Name the device and explain how it can create irony or tone.

 Understatement; can create irony, minimize for effect

500

Analyze how a foil character functions. Provide a concise example of two contrasting characters and how the contrast highlights a theme.

 Foil contrasts protagonists to highlight qualities (e.g., Hamlet and Laertes highlight indecision vs. action).

500

Given a short persuasive claim (e.g., "School start times should be later"), outline a balanced argument that uses all three appeals once each.

Example: Ethos—quote a sleep researcher; Pathos—student testimony about fatigue; Logos—study data on academic improvement with later start times.

500

 Explain how shifts in tone within a text can affect reader interpretation, and give an example of a possible shift (e.g., playful to somber).

Shift can reframe meaning; e.g., lighthearted to grave increases perceived stakes.

500

Compare and contrast mood and tone using examples where tone is ironic but mood is tense.

Tone vs. mood: tone is speaker's attitude; mood is effect on reader. Example: ironic tone with tense mood occurs when narrator downplays danger but description builds dread.