Vocab
Nonfiction Text
Literary Analysis
Theme & Central Idea
Random
100


The words and phrases around a difficult word to help the reader determine meaning. Gives us hints and helps us to better understand. 



Context clues


100


What is objective vs subjective? 



Objective = only facts 

Subjective = personal beliefs included with facts 


100


Figurative comparison using “like” or “as”?


Simile 

100


Theme is best described as what?


 lesson or message

100


When answering multiple choice questions, what should you always revisit?



The passage 


200


Denotation means what?


Literal meaning

200


What is the difference between claim and counterclaim? 



Claim = authors main point

Counterclaim = the opposite of the authors belief 


200


The series of events that make up a story.



The Plot of the story 


200


What the text is mostly about is known as the _______   _________ of the text. 



Central idea 


200


What should be included on your blank paper? 



Who, what, where, when, why, how, details 


300


Connotation refers to what?


emotional meaning

300


Author's purpose includes what three main ideas?


inform, persuade, entertain

300


What is the difference between tone and mood? 



Tone = authors feelings 

Mood = how the reader feels 


300


What develops theme throughout a story?


Characters, events, and details 

300


The term used to make a guess based on evidence.


Inference 

400


Passage: 

“The athlete showed remarkable endurance, continuing the race long after others had stopped.”

Question: 

What does “endurance” most nearly mean?



Ability to keep going 


400


Passage: 

“School uniforms reduce distractions, improve focus, and create a sense of unity among students.”

Questions: 

What is the author’s claim? 



School uniforms improve the school environment


400

Passage: 

“The house loomed over the hill, its broken windows staring like hollow eyes.”

Question: 

What mood does the author create? 

Eerie or suspenseful


400


Passage: 

“Even after failing twice, Lila continued to practice every afternoon. By the end of the year, she performed flawlessly on stage.”

Question: 

What theme is BEST supported by this passage? 


Perseverance leads to success 

400

Passage: 

“Marcus closed his notebook and stared out the window. The rain tapped steadily on the glass, matching the slow rhythm of his thoughts. He hadn’t told anyone about the competition yet—not even his best friend.”

Question: 

Which sentence BEST supports the inference that Marcus is feeling uncertain?

 “He hadn’t told anyone about the competition yet”

500


Passage: 

“At the meeting, the teachers realized they would need to consolidate their math teams so they would have enough people to participate in the competition on Saturday morning.”

Question: 

What does consolidate mean as it is used in the sentence? 

a. Mingle 

b. Divide 

c. Combine 


c. Combine 

500

Passage: 

“Some argue homework is unnecessary, but studies show that moderate homework improves retention and reinforces learning skills.”

Question: 

If the claim is homework improves learning. Which evidence BEST supports the claim? 


Studies show moderate homework improves retention


500


Passage: 

“At the beginning, Jenna refused to speak in class. By the end, she confidently presented her project.”

Questions: 

How does Jenna change? 


She becomes more confident 

500


Passage: 

“Many cities are creating more public parks. Studies show access to green space improves mental health and community well-being.”

Question: 

What is the central idea? 


public parks improve mental health and communities

500


Passage: 

“The scientist repeated the experiment three times, recording each result carefully. Though the outcomes varied slightly, all results pointed to the same conclusion.”

Question:

Which piece of evidence BEST supports the idea that the results were reliable?


“The scientist repeated the experiment three times”