Text Features
Poetry
Irony
Point of View
Figurative Language
Figurative Language Examples
Text Structure
Literature
Vocabulary
Vocabulary 2
Rhetoric
100

Shows where places/events are located.

Map

100

Words written in verse to convey thoughts, emotions, experiences, and ideas.

Poetry

100

What is a contrast between what is expected and what actually happens?

Irony

100

The way author's let readers see and hear what is going on in a story.

Point of View

100

Giving something that isn't human humanlike characteristics.

Personification 

100

My brother is as good as gold.

Simile

100

Tells about a problem and how it is solved.

Problem & Solution

100

People, animals, or objects in a story.

Characters

100

What is the literal or dictionary definition of a word?

Denotation

100

The main focus of text.

Central Idea

100

Questions asked to emphasize a point or provoke thought.

Rhetorical Questions

200

Shows what something looks like.  Taken with a camera.

Photograph 

200

A row of words in poetry.

Line

200

When the reader knows something that the characters don't know.

Dramatic Irony

200

Use narrators who are not characters in the story.

Pronouns like... she, he, they, his, hers, them, and theirs

Third Person Point of View

200

A form of comparison in which one thing is compared to another unlike thing by using the words "like" or "as".

Simile

200

My bed was calling me.

Personification

200

Describes how things are similar and different.

Compare & Contrast

200

The time and location where the story takes place. 

Setting

200

What refers to the emotional or cultural associations of a word?

Connotation

200

Facts, statements, and examples that clarify, explain, and describe the central idea.

Supporting Details

200

Ethics

Establishing personal credentials

Getting your audience to trust you

Ethos

300

Shows what something looks like.  Drawn by an artist.

Illustration  

300

The repetition of sounds at the end of words.

Rhyme

300

When something happens that we wouldn't expect to happen.

Situational Irony

300

The story is told by the narrator.  The narrator is a character in the story.

Pronouns... I, us, mine, we, my, and our

First Person Point of View

300

A form of comparison that directly compares two unlike things with the same quality.

Metaphor 

300

My backpack weighs a ton.

Hyperbole

300

Shows what happened and why it happened.

Cause & Effect

300

What the author wants you to know or learn.

A broad idea about life.

The life lesson, meaning, moral, or message about life or human nature that is communicated by literary work.

Theme

300

How you, the audience, feels when reading or viewing the author's work.

Mood

300

When you are asked to read between the lines to determine meaning.

Infer

300

Logic

Arguing based on reason and facts

Getting your audience to think

Logos

400

Explains what a photograph or illustration is about.

Caption

400

The separation of lines in poetry, like paragraphs in a story.

Stanza

400

What is said is different from what is meant.

Verbal Irony

400

The point of view is the reader himself.

Typically used in informational text to give directions.

Pronouns... you and yours

Second Person Point of View

400

The repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighboring words or syllables.

Alliteration

400

Her hair is silk.

My baby sister is a doll.

Metaphor 

400

Shows events in time order.

Chronological Order

400

The problem in the story.

Conflict

400

The author's attitude or feeling about the subject that he/she writes about.

Tone

400

Breaking something down into its parts and closely inspecting each of the elements.

Analyze

400

Pity

Inspiring an emotional response

Getting your audience to feel

Pathos

500

Organizes and helps compare information in a visual way.

Graph

500

Sounds, words, phrases, or lines that are repeated for emphasis or unity.

Repetition

500

Example

Home Alone

We know Kevin has planted traps everywhere, but the thieves don't.

Dramatic Irony

500

This narrator tells the story from the perspective of one character.

The reader can find out what one person thinks or feels.

Third Person Limited Point of View

500

An expression that holds a different meaning than its literal meaning.

The language peculiar to a group of people.

A word or phrase that isn't meant to be taken literally.

Idiom

500

Break a leg.

I'm calling it a night.

She sings a the top of her lungs.

Let the cat out of the bag.

Idiom

500

Provides steps in a procedure.

Sequence

500

The organized pattern or sequence of events that make up a story.

Plot

500

Descriptive words that appeal to the five senses to create pictures in the reader's minds.

Sensory Details

500

When you make an idea, situation, or problem clear by describing it in detail with relevant facts and information.

Explain

500

Example:

Scientific research and legal arguments.

Logos

600

Identifies the topic of text.  Tells what the text will be about.

Title

600

The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry.

Meter

600

Example

You tell someone to break a leg, but you mean for them to have good luck.

Verbal Irony

600

This narrator can see into the minds of all characters and can report what they are thinking and feeling.

"All-knowing"

Third Person Omniscient

600

A big exaggeration, usually with humor.

Hyperbole 

600

She sells seashells by the seashore. 

The wild and wooly walrus waits and wonders when we'll walk by.

Alliteration 

600

Provides details or characteristic of a topic. Paints a mental picture.

Description

600

The turning point in the story.

Usually the most exciting or surprising part in the story.

Climax

600

A brief comment made on stage to the audience, so that the other characters cannot hear.

Aside

600

When you provide a judgement on the value, importance, or effectiveness of something.

Evaluate

600

Example:

A person being inclined to believe a medical professional on issues related to health. 

Ethos

700

Added information related to the topic, usually located on the side of the page.

Sidebar

700

What is the rhyming scheme?

True friends are by your side

Through it all.

True friends are there

To catch you when you fall.

A

B

C

B

700

Example

The fire station burns to the ground.

Situational Irony

700

This narrator presents just the facts.

He can only tell you what he has seen or heard.

Third Person Objective Point of View

700

Naming a thing or action by imitating the sound associated with it.

Onomatopoeia 

700

No pain, no gain.

What goes around, comes around.

Absence makes the heart grow fonder.

Cliche 

700

Giving the reader hints about what's to come.

Foreshadowing 

700

A short, interesting or amusing story about a real incident or person.

Anecdote

700

When a single word governs or modifies two or more words in different ways to create surprise and humor.

Example:

He lost his coat and his temper.

Zeugma

700

Example:

Advertising and art

Pathos

800

A number in the text referring to a source or additional information at the page's bottom.

Footnotes

800

How many syllables does each line have?

Thoughts they come and go

Like butterflies that flutter

Watch them carefully

5

7

5

800

A word or phrase that has become overly familiar or commonplace.

Cliche

800

buzz

hiss

roar

woof

Onomatopoeia

800

The attempt in literature and art to represent life as it really is, without sentimentalizing or idealizing it.

Realism