Elemental
Romeo, Romeo
Frenchie and Friends
Figuratively Speaking
Lit is Lit
100

The two types of third person narration.

Limited and omniscient 

100

The city and country in which Romeo and Juliet takes place. 

Verona, Italy

100

The direction Frenchie and his found family are travelling in. 

North
100

The door grew tired, opening and closing everyday. 

Personification

100

A hint or clue about what is to come later on in a story.

Foreshadowing

200

The most exciting part of a story. 

Climax

200

The person who tells Romeo that Juliet is a Capulet. 

Nurse

200

The two traders whose actions lead to RiRi's death. 

Travis and Lincoln

200

I slept for a week after that run.

Hyperbole

200

Conversations or words that characters say.

Dialogue

300

A character who does not grow or change in a story. 

Static character

300

The leader of the city who condemns the feud. 

Prince Escalus

300

The character who delivers this line: "We are actually both motivated by the same thing: survival."

Miig

300

Time is money.

Metaphor

300

A pilot has a fear of heights.

Situational irony

400

All six types of conflict.

Person vs. Person, Person vs. Self, Person vs. Society, Person vs. Nature, Person vs. Supernatural, Person vs. Technology 

400

Romeo is exiled to this city. 

Mantua

400

At the end of the novel, Miig is reunited with this person. 

Isaac

400

The book hit the table with a thump. 

Onomatopoeia

400

The central idea or message in a text.

Theme

500

The event that sets the story in motion. 

Inciting incident

500

The phrase that Mercutio repeats as he dies. 

"A plague o' both your houses!"

500

The language that Minerva teaches the family. 

Cree

500

It was a hideously beautiful thing to say. 

Oxymoron

500

The author's attitude toward the subject is communicated through this.

Tone