Fig. Language 1
Fig. Language 2
Fig. Language 3
Plot
Narrative Elements
100

This uses the words like or as to make an indirect comparison.

What is a simile?

100

These are details related to the five senses.

What are sensory details?

100

He moved as slowly as a sloth.

What is simile?

100

This is the first part of the plot diagram.

What is exposition?

100

This is a universal lesson that the author wants readers to take away at the end of the story.

What is a theme?

200

This is a direct comparison between two nouns.

What is a metaphor?

200

This is a word that represents a sound.

What is an onomatopoeia?

200

Patrick pranked Plankton with pretty patties. 

What is alliteration?

200

This is the second part of the plot diagram.

What is rising action?

200

This is the main character in the story. 

Who is the protagonist?

300

This is gives human characteristics to something that is not human.

What is personification?

300

This is a reference to a well-known person, event, or text.

What is an allusion?

300

Bam! The door slammed close.

What is onomatopoeia?

300

This is the third part of the plot diagram.

What is the climax?

300

This is the character that causes conflict in the story.

Who is the antagonist?

400

This is an extreme exaggeration.

What is a hyperbole?

400

This is the repetition of the beginning sounds of words in a sentence (like in a tongue twister). 

What is alliteration?

400

She is a shining star.

What is metaphor?

400

This is the fourth part of the plot diagram.

What is the falling action?

400

This is the conversation between characters that normally appears in quotation marks.

What is dialogue?

500

This is a phrase that has a different meaning than what is said.

What is an idiom?

500

This is the opposite of figurative meaning.

What is literal meaning?

500

That test was a piece of cake!

What is idiom?

500
This is the fifth part of the plot diagram.

What is the resolution?

500

This is where the story takes place. 

What is the setting?