Author's Tools
Language
Parts of a Story
Grammar
Misc.
100

Central idea or underlying meaning of a literary work

Theme

100

Gives human qualities to non-human things

Personification

100

Visually represents the key events in a story. Contains exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and conclusion

Plot Map

100

Used to introduce a list, explanation, or quotation. Can also be used for emphasis

Colon

100

Restating ideas in your own words

Paraphrasing

200

Hints in the text that help you understand unfamiliar words

Context Clues

200

A word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun. Can describe qualities, quantities, or states of being

Adjective

200

Occurs when the audience knows something the characters don't, and creates tension and engages the audience

Dramatic Irony

200

Used to connect closely related independent clauses. Can replace a period or coordinating conjunction. Also used to separate items in a complex list

Semicolon

200

The process of drawing conclusions based on evidence and reasoning

Inference

300

How an author develops and reveals a character's personality

Characterization

300

The repetition of initial consonant sounds in nearby words

Alliteration

300

The process of drawing conclusions based on evidence, and it involves analyzing information and making connections

Logical Reasoning

300

Contains two or more independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction

Compound Sentence

300

Involves using clues and prior knowledge to guess future events. Can be based on character development, plot progression, or foreshadowing

Predicting the Ending

400

The main point or argument authors are trying to make. It's often supported by evidence and reasoning throughout the text

Author's Claim

400

Questions are asked to make a point, not to get an answer

Rhetorical Questions

400

Elements in a text that help to develop, illustrate, or reinforce the main idea, theme, or argument

Supporting Details

400

A word that shows the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in the sentence.

Preposition

400

Shows how events are connected

Cause and Effect

500

Author's attitude toward the subject or audience and is conveyed through word choice, sentence structure, and imagery

Author's Tone

500

Use of similar grammatical structures in a sentence or paragraph

Parallelism

500

Dramatic device where a character speaks their thoughts aloud

Soliloquy 

500

A clause that modifies a noun or pronoun in the sentence. Usually begins with a relative pronoun (who, whom, whose, which, that)

Relative Clause

500

The emotional or cultural association of a word beyond its literal meaning

Connotation