Something you can be/do
Figurative Language
Something you can have
Other
Figurative Language 2
100

Develops critical thinking skills to analyze an experience

Reflect

100

To give warning or indication that something is going to happen

Foreshadow

100
  1. An excuse or claim that someone was elsewhere during a criminal act

Alibi

100

A cultural event for the Navajo used to invoke positive blessings and to avert misfortune

Blessingway Ceremony

100

The ordered pattern of rhymes, at the end of the lines of a poem

Rhyme Scheme

200

A person who might be guilty of a crime or offense

Suspect

200

 reaction or feeling towards a particular word or idea (usually positive or negative)

Connotation

200

A reason for doing something, usually this is hidden

Motive

200

To look back and reflect on something in order to make changes

Re-Evaluate

200

Calling something to mind without mentioning it explicitly, referring to something well known

Allusion

300

A claim, to charge a person with an offense or crime

Accuse

300

The atmosphere within the setting, how it would ‘feel’ to be there

Mood

300

Develop critical thinking skills to analyze an experience

Reflect

300

The final part of a story where the plot ends are drawn together to be explained/resolved

Denouement

300

Continuing a sentence with a pause onto the next line

Enjambment

400

To conclude, a conclusion that is the result of evidence and reasoning

Infer

400

The central idea, moral, or lesson of a text

Theme

400

A contract between nations and/or tribes

Treaty

400

A traditional story, usually an accepted belief that is not necessarily true

Mythology

400

Basic rhythm structure of a line in poetry

Meter

500

Making goals around progress and growth, focusing on the ‘journey not the destination’

Process-Oriented

500

When words are used in a phrase but not for their literal meaning

Idiom

500

A subdivision in a play; a single situation or dialog in a play

Scene

500

To give official approval, action, or penalty

Sanction

500

Using words to express a different or opposite meaning for humor

Irony