The vantage point from which a story is told.
Point Of View [author]
To tell a story that you would enjoy and makes you laugh.
Entertain
To convince others to feel a particular way about a topic
Persuade
Statements that cannot be proven true.
Opinions
A visual aid that condenses information into a series of rows, lines or other shortened lists
Charts, tables, and graphs.
When the person telling the story is the main character
First Person
the clear and easy expression of ideas, either written or spoken.
Fluency
The attitude of the author toward the audience and characters
Tone
A diagram Or pictorial device that shows relationships.
Graphic Organizer
A judgement based on reasoning rather than something stated directly in the passage.
"Reading between the lines."
Inference
The narrator is talking to "YOU"
Second Person.
the center of interest or attention
Focus
The fluency, rhythm and liveliness in writing that make it unique to the writer. your written personality the "style" you write with [friendly, formal, every day, short/long sentences].
Voice
Photographs, drawings, maps, or other pictures that give additional information about the text.
Graphics
To examine and judge carefully.
Evaluate
Point of view in which the narrator is not a character in the story. Pronouns They,them
Third Person
To give information about a particular topic; to explain why something is important.
Inform.
Text that is next to photo or graphic
Caption
the title at he start of a page or section, usually bold or print
heading
To restate the most important information in the text
Summarize
The authors purpose for writing {facts} Argumentative.
Author's Purpose
How the author writes; an author's use of language; its effects and appropriateness to the author's intent and theme.
Style
Statements that can be proven true.
Facts
A secondary heading, a mini-topic related to the heading
Subheading
To restate a text or passage in other words, often to show understanding or clarify the meaning.
Paraphrase