Figurative Language
Plot and Structure
Genre Study
Vocabulary and Word Parts
The Reader’s Toolbox
100

A comparison of two unlike things using the words "like" or "as."

Simile

100

The time and place in which a story occurs.

Setting

100

A literary work based on the imagination and not necessarily on fact, such as Harry Potter.

Fiction

100

Words with similar meanings, such as "difficult" and "hard."

Synonyms

100

To restate a passage in your own words to clarify the meaning.

paraphrase

200

The use of words that mimic sounds, such as "Crackle," "Boom," or "Zap."

Onomatopoeia

200

The "Memory Moment" where the normal timeline of a story is interrupted to show an earlier event.

flashback

200

The story of a person’s life written by that person themselves.

Autobiography

200

An affix added to the beginning of a word to alter its meaning, like "dis-" in "disbelief."

prefix

200

A conclusion based on reasoning and "reading between the lines" rather than a direct statement.

inference

300

An exaggerated statement used to emphasize a point, like saying "I have millions of friends!"

Hyperbole

300

The turning point of a story where the action reaches its greatest conflict and the story changes.

Climax

300

A brief story that leads to a moral or lesson, often using animals as characters.

Fable

300

A word made up of two or more smaller words, like "wallpaper" or "bookstore."

Compound Word

300

When a writer takes the most important information from a text and uses it "word for word."

cited evidence

400

Giving human characteristics to a lifeless object, such as a tornado "dancing" across a prairie.

Personification

400

The part of the plot where the conflict is worked out and the story ends.


resolution

400

A story handed down from earlier times whose truth is believed but cannot be proven.

Legend
400

Words that are pronounced the same but have different spellings and meanings, like "witch" and "which."

homophones

400

The attitude of the author toward the audience or the characters, such as being serious or humorous.

tone

500

A saying whose meaning cannot be understood from the individual words in it, like "off the top of his head."

Idiom

500

Clues or hints given by the author about events that will happen later in the story.

foreshadowing

500

Fiction that is set in a real time period from the past, such as Little House on the Prairie.

Historical Fiction

500

A strategy where the reader looks at the words around an unfamiliar word to find its meaning.

context clues

500

An object in a story that represents a larger idea, such as a dove representing peace.

symbolism