Growing tired of the other kids copying the girl, The teacher yelled "This mimicking must stop!"
This word best helps us understand the word "mimicking"
Copying
These are the two types of point of view we discussed in class.
First and Third person
This type of literary text is organized into verses and stanzas
Poetry
This type of literary text is organized into scenes or acts.
Drama/Play
This type of literary text is organized into paragraphs and sentences.
Prose
This word in the following poems means to cry out in sadness or pain.
The saddest fish that swims the briny ocean,
The Catfish I bewail
I cannot even think without emotion
Of his distressful tail.
bewail
This type of noun can be used to identify a stories point of view.
Pronoun
The following statement is true or false.
All poems must rhyme.
False
A drama mainly consists of characters talking.
This type of text is called.
Dialogue
This type of literary text would be read with rhythm.
Poetry
The teacher was nonplussed, even after careful consideration she wasn't sure what to do next.
The word nonplussed most likely means
a) not happy b) unsure c) angry d) surprised
b) unsure
The following excerpt is from this persons' point of view.
"This is mama wolf, and I hope everyone has a wonderful day!"
Mrs. Burkhead
These two elements of a drama tell characters how to act and what to say.
a)stage directions b)rhythm c)stanzas d)dialogue
A & D
This type of figurative language is found when a words phonetic spelling matches the noise it describes.
These two types of figurative language are used to compare to unlike things in a story.
Simile & Metaphor
This word or phrase would be best to replace the term "uncanny" in this passage ( not canned / beyond normal / really bad / alien )
It sometimes seemed like he had eyes in the back of his head. The teachers' ability to notice students playing games was truly uncanny.
These three pronouns would be found in a third person point of view text. (Any three)
he, she, him, his, her, hers, they, them, their, theirs, himself, themselves, herself, it, its, itself,
Textbooks, magazines, and chapter books are this type of literary text.
Prose
These two features would only be found in a script for a play and not in a story.
a)Descriptions provided by a narrator b)Events that tell what happened c)stage directions d)dialogue between characters e)cast of characters f)Description of the setting
C & E
This type of figurative language uses a common phrase or saying that has a non literal meaning.
Idiom
This meaning for the word "rash" best fits in the the following sentences.
Speaking rudely to the judges was rash behavior. You really hurt your chances of winning.
a) an itchy skin condition b)funny c)trying to hide or disguise a piece of cheese d) with little thought or consideration
d) with little thought or consideration
This point of view gives the reader many different character perspectives.
Third Person
This term describes the underlying message that one might find in a poem, drama, or prose.
Theme
This type of figurative language describes something with a great exaggeration.
Hyperbole
The except shown below has this type of rhyme pattern.
How doth the little crocodile
Improve his shining tail,
And pour the waters of the Nile
on every golden scale!
ABAB