St. Hope
Literary Terms
Literary Terms Pt.2
MISCELLANEOUS
100

The Address of our school.

What is 222 W 134th Street?

100

The point of highest tension in a story, in which the main conflict is faced and ultimately resolved.

What is the Climax?

100

The sequence of major events of a narrative or dramatic work, usually consisting of five basic elements: exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution.

What is Plot?

100

The five human senses.

What is taste, touch, smell, hearing, and sight?

200

The time the third floor can go to the bathroom.

Top of the hour.

200

The central struggle that drives the plot of a story or, more generally, any struggle between opposing forces in a story.

What is Conflict?

200

The perspective from which the events of a story are reported to the reader or audience.

What is Point of View?

200

The name of the force that causes objects to fall to the ground.

What is Gravity?

300

Name 3 of the counselors in the building.

Who are White, Marrero, and Castro?

300

An extreme exaggeration used to make a point, often humorously.

What is Hyperbole?

300

The speaker telling the story in a narrative work of literature.

What is Narrator?

300

The month and day when the US gained its independence.

What is July 4th?

400

The amount of booths in the cafeteria.

What is 11?

400

Descriptive or figurative language that attempts to evoke mental images by appealing to the reader’s senses of sight, sound, smell, texture, or taste.

What is Imagery?

400

The time and place in which a story unfolds.

What is Setting?

400

The amount of months with 31 days in them.

What is 7?

500

The amount of basketball hoops in the gym.

What is 6?

500

A figure of speech that features a comparison between two disparate things that are not literally the same.

What is Metaphor?

500

An underlying or emerging abstract idea or concept explored in a literary work. One work may explore multiple themes.

What is Theme?

500

Name 4 presidents of the united states

Multiple correct responses