Why shouldn't one kill mockingbirds? Name 2 'mockingbirds' in TKAM.
They don't harm anyone. Boo, Tom, Dil.
Setting for Romeo and Juliet
Verona
This person wrote the Hate List (in the story).
Valerie
This story was about a detective who stops a bank robbery. (bonus: explain how)
"The Red-Headed League"
This point of view is when the narrator knows everything, including the thoughts, of all the characters
Third-person omniscient
You don't understand someone until....
you climb into their skin and walk around in it.
what happens between paris and romeo at the tomb?
Romeo kills Paris
Who was the person who caused the tragedy?
Nick
This story is about a man who has 3 days to avoid being hunted by a retired general.(Bonus: explain how he survives)
Most Dangerous Game
This point of view is when the narrator see and reports things through one persons eyes
Third-person limited.
How does Bob Ewell die? (and by whom)
Stabbed by Boo Radley
What was Friar Lawrence's plan for Juliet?
take a potion that will make Juliet look like she is dead
This person befriended Valerie and told the police she didn't kill anyone.
Jessica.
This story is about a guy who daydreams all the time because he is picked on often.
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.
Expository
What happened to Tom Robinson after the trial.
He gets shot.
Romeo slays ______ and in turn is _______ from Verona by the Prince.
This person wrote Hate List (the novel).
Jennifer Brown
This story is about a man who gets revenge by burying someone alive 50 years before the story was written.
"The Cask of Amontillado"
The main idea of a story is suggested indirectly though the experiences of the characters or through the events and the setting of the work.
Implied theme.
What was Scout dressed as in the school play?
a ham
How long does the Friar expect Juliet to sleep? What ruins his plan?
42 hours. Lord Capulet moves the wedding day up.
The newsreporter who wrote all of the articles about the shooting.
Who is Angela Dash?
This story was about a basketball coach and the lesson he teachers.
"The Carolina Way"
The word for language that creates vivid impressions by setting up comparisons between dissimilar things (similes, metaphors, personification)
Figurative Language