MEAL Paragraphs
TKAM
Romeo & Juliet
Figurative Language
Elements of Fiction
100

The claim expressed in a topic sentence at the beginning of a paragraph

Main Idea

100

Got his arm caught in a cotton gin

Tom Robinson

100

A rude, insulting gesture in Act I Scene I

Biting your thumb

100

a comparison of two unlike things using like or as

simile

100

the people or animals in a story

characters

200

Quotes from a piece of text used to support the writer's claim

Evidence

200

Tends to her garden with the utmost care

Miss Maudie

200

How the brawl in Act I Scene I is ended

The prince threatens the Montagues and Capulets with death if he catches them fighting in the streets again

200

repeated sounds at the beginning of words

alliteration

200

the time and location of a story

setting

300

Average length of a MEAL paragraph

5-8 sentences

300

Has an active imagination and tells lots of fibs

Dill Harris

300

Juliet wakes up to find Romeo dead from poison. Since there is no poison left in the bottle, she...

stabs herself with Romeo's dagger

300

giving human characteristics to non-human things

personification

300

the series of events in a story

plot

400

The final sentence that restates the claim and sums up the writer's ideas

Last Thought or Link

400

Pays Atticus for legal work with produce; has a large family

Mr. Cunningham

400

Juliet's father goes into a rage and tells her he is going to throw her out if the house because...

she refuses to marry Paris

400

a reference to a person, place, or event with no context or explanation; the author expects the reader to know who or what they are referring to

allusion

400

the problem or issue in a story

conflict

500

The sentences that demonstrate the writer's understanding of the prompt and comprehension of the text; the most important part of MEAL

Analysis

500

Lives the last days of her life courageously

Mrs. Dubose

500

Friar Lawrence tells Romeo that "These violent delights have violent ends, And in their triumph die, like fire and powder, Which, as they kiss, consume." This is an example of

foreshadowing

500

the contrast between expectation and reality; when the outcome is the opposite of what is normally expected

irony

500

the lesson or message that the author implies in a text

theme