What is the story is mostly about?
What do headings in an article help you do?
What is find the main idea of each section?
What is a synonym for "happy"?
What is joyful?
What punctuation goes at the end of a question?
What is a question mark?
What should you do when a question asks, “How do you know?”
What is find text evidence?
What do you call the person who tells the story?
What is the narrator?
What do you call the reason an author writes something, like to explain, entertain, or inform?
What is the author’s purpose?
What do you call a word that means the opposite of another?
What is an antonym?
Choose the correct sentence:
Their going to the park.
They’re going to the park.
What is: They’re going to the park.
When something is not said directly in the text, but you figure it out using clues and what you know, what is that called?
What is an inference?
When a character faces a problem in a story, what is that called?
What is the conflict?
If two articles give different opinions on the same topic, what kind of thinking do you use to understand both?
What is comparing and contrasting?
If “pre-” means before, what does “preview” mean?
What is to view before?
What is the subject of this sentence: “The cat chased the mouse”?
What is "The cat"?
True or False: When you make an inference, you must use both text clues and your own thinking.
What is True?
What is the difference between first-person and third-person point of view?
What is: First-person uses "I" or "me," and third-person uses "he," "she," or "they."
What kind of signal words might show a cause and effect relationship in a text?
What are words like because, so, therefore, and as a result?
What do you call words like “buzz,” “bang,” or “sizzle”?
What is onomatopoeia?
Which word is an adjective: “The tall man ran quickly”?
What is tall?
If a story says, “The sky grew dark and thunder rumbled,” what can you infer?
What is: A storm is coming.
What are the two types of third person and explain?
Third person limited- one point of view, Third person omni- all points of view.
What do you call the text structure that shows how two or more things are alike and different?
What is compare and contrast?
What’s a word that has more than one meaning, like “bat”?
What is a multiple-meaning word?
Combine these two sentences: “The dog barked. The dog ran.”
What is: The dog barked and ran.
You read: “Amy hugged her trophy and smiled at the crowd.” What can you infer about Amy?
What is: She won something and feels proud.