Central Idea & Theme
Inference & Author Intention
Figurative Language & Tone
Vocabulary in Context
Sentence Structure & Grammar
100

How is the central idea of a text?

What the text is mostly about.

100

What does it mean to make an inference?

Use clues from the text to understand something not said.

100

What is tone?

The author's attitude toward the subject.

100

What is the most reliable way to determine a word's meaning in a passage?

Use context clues from the surrounding text.

100

What are the two essential components of a complete sentence?

A subject and a verb.

200

What is a theme?

A message or lesson about life.

200

What clues helps you infer a character's feelings?

The characters actions, thoughts, or dialogue.

200

What figurative language example is a reference to a well-known person, place, event, work of literature, or art?

Allusion

200

Why might a familiar word a different meaning in a literary text?

Authors use figurative or connotative meanings.

200

Identify where the hyphen should be located in the following sentence?

"Barring any last minute edits, the magazine is ready to go to print!"

Between last & minute (last-minute)

300

Where does the central idea usually come from?

Important details repeated in the text.

300

If an author includes mostly facts and statistics, what is the likely purpose?

To inform

300

How does figurative language affect the tone?

It adds emotion or imagery that shape how readers feel.

300

"With the effects of their tremors mitigated in this way, Parkinson's patients are able to feed themselves with greater ease."

Using context clues, what does mitigated likely mean?

Reduced or made less severe

300
Why do authors vary sentence length?

To control pacing and emphasize ideas.

400

Why is a detail not the same as a central idea?

A detail is only one part of the text.

400

How does word choice help reveal the author's attitude toward a topic?

Positive or negative language shows author's approval or criticism.

400

Identify the device used in the bolded section:

Mr. Wolfsheim, forgetting the more sentimental atmosphere of the old Metropole, began to eat with ferocious delicacy. -F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Oxymoron

400

"As hundreds of male spadefoot toads call for a mate, the normal stillness and silence of the desert is broken by the cacophony of their quack-like calls."

Using context clues what is the most likely meaning of cacophony? 

Chaotic noises

400

Identify all possessive/plural errors in the following sentence:

The Oakdale geeses' food supply has been dwindling recently, so they've been forced to find new home's. 

geese's / homes

500
How do readers find the theme of a story?

By looking at characters' actions and outcomes.

500

What is the effect of combining inferences with multiple details?

More evidence makes the conclusion stronger and more accurate.

500

Identify the device used and its effect on the tone.

Soon we were hemmed in with trees, which in places arched right over the roadway till we passed as through a tunnel; and again great frowning rocks guarded us boldly on either side.

Personification / It creates a suspenseful and ominous tone

500

The denotation of effigy is something that resembles or bears the likeness of someone. What is the connotation of this word?

Negative: relating to ridicule

500

Place all the necessary punctuation in the following sentence:

The Star of India sapphire a gem weighing 536 carats was stolen from the American Museum of Natural History in 1964 it was later recovered in a Miami bus station.

The Star of India sapphire, a gem weighing 536 carats, was stolen from the American Museum of Natural History in 1964; it was later recovered in a Miami bus station.