$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
100

The lesson you will learn after reading a story. Done

Moral

100

Giving person like characteristics to nonhuman things. Done

Personification

100

A type of stereotype that is used over and over again.

Cliche

100

The lines that form a basic unit in a poem.

Stanza

100

A way of expressing oneself that does not use the words real meaning.

Figurative Language

200

The person who reads/retells the story in third person

Narrator

200

Trying to explain what the text means in your own words, even if you do not know it. Done

Interpret

200

The main idea of the text.

Central Idea

200

Authors  attitude towards a certain topic.

Tone

200

It is an extreme exaggeration and a type of figurative language

Hyperbole

300

The act of making sounds by putting them in words, like “POW”, or “BANG”. Done

Onomatopoeia

300

Making a shorter version of the text, or paragraphs, in your own words. Done

Summarize

300

Something you put after a quote to give the author credit.

Cite/Citation

300

It is leaving no room for confusion or doubt

Explicit

300

A group of words meaning something else.

Idiom

400

Somebody’s statement supported by statements or claims. They are usually not factually based. Done

Opinion

400

The cause is what happened, and the effect is what happens because of the cause.

Cause and effect

400

You compare the similarities and differences.

Compare and Contrast

400

Writing arranged in a metrical rhythm mainly having a rhyme.

Verse

400

It is the classification of literary in its own form

Genre

500

Restating an author’s evidence or sentence but putting it in your own words. Done

Paraphrase

500

A person’s attitude or behavior makes up their personality.

Character Trait

500

A phrase that uses like or as in it.

Simile

500

The available body of facts or info proving  true or valid

Evidence

500

To determine the value or significance of something in literature.

Evaluate