Inform Writing
Perspective
Writing Standards
Literary Devices
Bonus
100

Explanatory/non fiction text.

Informative

100

A strong opinion for or against something.

Bias

100

Putting direct information into an essay with no change to its wording.

Quotation.

100

When an author leaves a hint about what may happen later in the story.

Foreshadow.

100

Mr. Honerman spends a lot of his time with this activity.

Theatre.

200

When an author removes their opinions and possible biases.

Objective.

200

When an author writes to inform, persuade, or entertain.

Purpose

200

The page at the end of an essay to identify sources.

Works Cited

200

A scene that interrupts the flow of the story to jump back to a previous time.

Flashback

200

Mr. Honerman's favorite author.

Stephen King

300

Information that proves or disproves something.

Evidence

300

Customs, art, social norms, institutions, and achievements of other people or nations.

Culture

300

How sources should be organized in a works cited.

Alphabetically

300

The author's feelings/attitude for a topic.

Tone

300

Mr. Honerman's favorite food sometimes contains this controversial ingredient.

Pineapple

400

Includes formal, informal, objective, and subjective writing.

Style

400

When an author provides a deeper meaning to a topic without directly stating it.

Implying.

400

Words or phrases that move the reader from one idea to the next.

Transitions

400

The lesson or message of a story.

Theme

400

Mr. Honerman has this character tattooed on his right bicep.

Batman

500

The sentence that provides the main ideas of the paper.

Thesis Statement

500

An author's culture and experience develop this.

Perspective.

500

How you write/format a book title.

Italicize

500

How an author directly or indirectly describes or provides clues to a character's personality.

Characterization

500

Mr. Honerman has been married for this many years.

Twelve