Vocabulary
Vocabulary
Reading Skills
Reading Skills
Grammar and Figurative Language
Grammar and Figurative Language
Poetry
The Banana Tree
The Raven
The Outsiders
100

a terrible or difficult situation

What is plight?

100

a twisted face showing pain or disgust

What is grimace?

100

anxious or fearful about the future

What is apprehensive?

100

the beginning, middle, and end of important events. The story itself.

What is plot?

100

person, place, thing, or idea.

What is a noun?

100

expresses strong emotions. Followed by an exclamation point or a comma depending on the strength of emotion. Examples: Wow!, Yuck!, Yes!, Holy cow!

What is an interjection?

100

a group of lines in a poem

What is a stanza?

100

Where does the family go to seek protection from the hurricane?

What is a church?

100

What type of writing is The Raven?

A poem.

100

What does Ponyboy think separates the greasers and the socs?

How they feel, show, and handle their emotions. 

200

to live in a place

What is reside?

200

important or deserving attention

What is noteworthy?

200

an award, honor, or praise

What is an accolade?

200

where and when the story takes place.

What is setting?

200

tells us more about a noun. Describes the noun. Examples: green, slow, five, stinky, tall, round.

What is an adjective?

200

a word that sounds like the sound it describes. (Pop!, meow, oink.)

What is an onomatopoeia?

200

the amount of syllables in a line of poetry

What is meter?

200

What is one internal conflict of the story?

Gustus feels that his father does not understand his needs.

200

What is the narrator's mood at the beginning of the poem?

Amused and curious about the mysterious tapping.

200

What is the main theme of the poem, "Nothing Gold Can Stay," which Ponyboy recites to Johnny?

that all things precious inevitably fade, change, and are lost over time, much like spring's golden first leaves or a sunset.

300

rough, noisy, and energetic

What is boisterous?

300

a threat or danger

What is menace?

300

big point or most important idea of the story or article.

What is the central or main idea?

300

the main character in a literary work.

What is a protagonist?

300

replaces a noun. Examples: I, he, she, they, it, his.

What is a pronoun?

300

the repetition of the same letter or sound at the beginning (usually consonants) of two or more neighboring words or syllables.

What is alliteration?
300

the ordered pattern of rhymes at the ends of lines of a poem

What is rhyme scheme?

300

What is one external conflict of the story?

Gustus and the rest of his community must brave a hurricane.

300

When still rational, what does the narrator assume the Raven's repeated use of the word "Nevermore" is a result of? 

The bird having been taught the word by "an unhappy master" who suffered disaster.

300

Ponyboy says that Socs "were always behind a wall of aloofness." What does he mean?

That the socs don't feel or care about anything.

400

a person who boasts or shows off

What is braggart?

400

dull and cheerless; lacking color or interest

What is drab?

400

a message or life lesson from the story.

What is theme?

400

a character or force in conflict with the main character.

What is an antagonist?

400

words we use before nouns or pronouns to show their relationship with other words in the sentence. Example: behind (the tree), across (Maple Street)

What is a preposition?

400

a comparison between two unlike things; usually describing one thing being another (The city was an ocean of lights.

What is a metaphor?

400

a change in the mood, emotions, thoughts, structure, or content in a poem

What is a shift?

400

Why is protecting the banana tree important to Gustus?

It is the only means through which he can make money, which he desperately needs to buy shoes. 

400

Which of the following contains alliteration:

1. "Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore—"

2. "While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,"

3. "Nothing farther then he uttered—not a feather then he fluttered—"

4. "On the cushion’s velvet lining that the lamp-light gloated o’er,"

2. "While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,"

400
How do Johnny and Ponyboy end up in the hospital? 

They got hurt rescuing kids from the burning abandoned church.

500

eager, very enthusiastic

What is avid?

500

to make certain

What is ensure?

500

the category of the writing (humor, science fiction, etc).

What is genre?

500

when the conflict’s intensity begins and develops

What is rising action?

500

tells more about a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Tells how, how many, when. Example: (He ate) slowly, (she ran) quickly, (we sang) loudly.

What is an adverb?

500

attributing human actions, emotions, or qualities to nonhuman things (The leaves danced in the wind.)

What is personification?

500

the atmosphere or feeling that you (the reader) get from the text or poem

What is mood?

500

What is Gustus's attitude toward the hurricane? 

One of determination and bravery.

500

What are the two questions the narrator desperately asks the Raven during his descent into madness?

1. Whether he will be reunited with Lenore 

2. If he can find any cure for his sorrow/sadness

500

Ponyboy compares himself to the character Pip from the novel Great Expectations. Why does he make this comparison? 

Because both Pip and Ponyboy are poor, underprivileged, and constantly looked down upon.

600

very low in spirits; hopeless

What is despondent?

600

to assign or give out a share (of time, money, etc.)

What is allot?

600

examples an author uses to support their claim 

evidence

600

when the conflict’s intensity lessens

What is falling action?

600

words that show action or a state of being. One of these is required in a sentence.

What is a verb?

600

a comparison using like or as (My dog is as cute as a button.)

What is a simile?

600

the author or speaker's attitude toward a subject

What is tone?

600

What is a calamity?

a disastrous event

600

What could the Raven's shadow "floating on the floor," symbolize at the end of the poem?

The narrator's unending, paralyzing grief and permanent despair. 

600

In an Interview with S.E. Hinton, the author states that only "the names and the uniforms have changed" when asked about social groups. What does she mean by this?

That the group structures have stayed the same over time, it is only the labels that are different.

700

comfort or relief from sadness

What is solace?

700

to make things happen at the same time

What is synchronize?

700

when the characters, setting, and situation are introduced

What is exposition?
700

when the conflict ends

What is resolution?

700

an exaggeration (My list is a mile long) (I’m so full I could explode!)

What is a hyperbole?
700

using the five senses to describe something

imagery

700

the repeating of a word or phrase for emphasis

What is repetition or refrain?

700

What are Gustus's parents' attitude towards the storm at the beginning of the story?

They are unconcerned, believing they've weathered worse.

700

What is the poem's final mood?

Absolute, permanent despair and psychological torment.

700

When Two-Bit refers to Randy (the recently deceased Bob's best friend) as a Soc, Ponyboy replies with "He ain't a Soc--he's just a guy." 

What does Ponyboy mean by this?

That people are more than the labels society pins on them.

That Randy is more than a Soc and the stereotypes attached to that label; he is his own individual.

800

never-ending; continuous

What is perpetual?

800

to delay or put off doing something

What is procrastinate?

800

when the conflict gets the most intense

What is climax?

800

an appeal to expertise

what is ethos?

800

an appeal to emotion

what is pathos?

800
a rhyme involving a word in the middle of a line and another at the end of a line

What is internal rhyme?

900

too satisfied, unconcerned, or self-satisfied

What is complacent?

900

extremely large or huge

What is colossal?

900

an appeal to logic/facts

what is logos?