Seven Steps
Advertising
When the War Began
Teen Representations
Poetry
100

The first of the Seven Steps.

What is Plan for Success?

100

The slogan is 'Oh, what a feeling!'

What is the slogan for Toyota?

100

The number of friends who initially go camping at Hell.

What is seven?

100

The informal, everyday language most often spoken in casual conversations.

What is colloquial language?

100

The repetition of similar sounding words at the end of lines in poems.

What is rhyme?

200

Starting the story with action.

What is a sizzling start?

200

Pictures or diagrams used to represent something else.

What are symbols?

200

The narrator of Tomorrow, When the War Began.

Who is Ellie Linton?

200

The three character types in a story.

What are protagonists, antagonists and antiheroes?

200

The use of two or more words that begin with the same sound.

What is alliteration?

300

When characters talk to each other.

What is dynamic dialogue?

300

A symbol chosen to represent a person or company.

What is a logo?

300

The town where Tomorrow, When the War Began is set.

What is Wirrawee?

300

Popular or common beliefs about types of people.


What are stereotypes?


300

The use of 'like' or 'as' to compare an object, person or event.

What is a simile?

400

Getting rid of the irrelevant bits.

What is ban the boring?

400

The person who writes the words for advertisements.

Who is the copywriter?

400

The means of transportation to move Lee to safety.

What is a front-end loader?

400

The principal in Greenhouse Academy.


Who is Louis Osmond?


400

The use of a word that imitates a sound.

What is onomatopoeia?

500

In persuasive writing, saving the best argument and persuasive devices until the last.

What is tightening tension?

500

The specialist language of a group, profession, skill or organisation.

What is jargon?

500

The place where the friends find Corrie after she has been shot.

What is Ellie's house?

500

The houseparents in Ready for This.

Who are Mick and Vee?

500

Exaggerated statements not meant to be taken literally.

What is hyperbole?