Plot Structure
Figurative Language
Poetry
Fiction and Narrative Forms
Text Features/Structures/Organization Patterns
100

very end of the story; all conflicts are resolved

resolution

100

The cars were hissing past us as we walked down the street.

personification

100

the beat of a poem

rhythm 

100

a traditional story passed down, usually orally, through the generations


EX: Little Red Riding Hood 

tales

100

Martin Luther King Jr. to give speech

Leader speaks at rally Tuesday



title, subtitle

200

complications/events are leading up to the climax (most of the story happens here)

rising action

200

BOOM was all I heard when the shelf holding 100 books fell behind the door.

onomatopoeia
200

poetry without any rhyme scheme or meter

free verse

200
Orbiting Jupiter is an example of this fiction

realistic fiction

200

a note of text placed at the bottom of the page in a book or document that cites a reference or defines a word

footnote

300

central or main conflict of the story is introduced

initiating event

300

Dally dared to dance during the derby.

alliteration

300

song-like narrative poem

ballad

300

a short story usually about animals that teaches a lesson or moral


EX: Tortoise and the Hare

fable

300

tells the time order of facts, events, or concepts 


EX: timeline, flowchart 

sequential or chronological 

400

turning point of the story

climax

400

If I'm not home by midnight, my car might turn into a pumpkin!

allusion (referring to Cinderella)

400

Gentle morning light 

Rice fields sway, a soft green sea 

Harvest whispers near


What type of poem is this?

haiku

400

this type of fiction includes gods and goddess that were once religious in nature

myths

400

a boxed section off to the side of a nonfiction text that contains interesting information relating to the main text

sidebar

500

beginning of a story, characters and setting are introduced

exposition

500

She's a sly fox

metaphor

500

Nature's first green is gold,

Her hardest hue to hold.

Her early leaf's a flower;

But only so an hour.

Then leaf subsides to leaf.

So Eden sank to grief,

So dawn goes down to day.

Nothing gold can stay. 


What is the rhyme scheme of this poem?

AABBCCDD 


Each couplet rhymes 

500

any writing that is NOT poetry

prose

500

a broad statement about a whole group based on a variety of information


EX: Eating sugar causes cavities.

generalization