This coffee shop is an ice box!, Personification, simile, Onomatopoeia, metaphor, I've told you a zillion times to clean your room!, Metaphor, Hyperbole, Simile, Personification, I move fast like a cheetah on the Serengeti., Personification, Hyperbole, Simile, Metaphor, The sky misses the sun at night., Metaphor, Simile, Hyperbole, Personification, She's drowning in a sea of grief., Simile, Personification, Metaphor, Onomatopoiea, She is as happy as a clam, Personification, Metaphor, Simile, Hyperbole, The sea lashed out in anger at the ships, unwilling to tolerate another battle., Metaphor, Personification, Simile, Hyperbole, The sun played hide and seek with the clouds., Simile, Metaphor, Hyperbole, Personification, The calm lake was a mirror., Metaphor, Hyperbole, Simile, Personification, They fought like cats and dogs., Personification, Simile, Metaphor, Hyperbole, A person, an animal, or an imaginary creature that takes part in the action of a story., setting, plot, character, Mood, A feeling that a literary work gives to readers., Theme, Plot, character, mood, The time and place in which the action occurs., Mood, Character, Setting, theme, A struggle between opposing forces., Mood, Setting, Conflict, Plot, The turning point of the story; conflict/problem at its worst., Exposition, Climax, Resolution, Plot, The first part of the plot. Author introduces setting and characters., Falling Action, Resolution, Exposition, Climax, Where the intensity builds up., Climax, Resolution, Rising Action, Exposition, Brings the story to a satisfactory end; the ending., Climax, Resolution, Exposition, Falling Action, The sequence of events that make up the story., Setting, Characters, Plot, Falling Action, Tension decreases as the conflict begins to be settled., Resolution, Exposition, Climax, Falling Action, Which sentence best describes the summary? , A, B, C, Which sentence best summarizes the story?, A, B, C, The message about life the author wants to convey to the reader., Tone, Theme, Plot, The overall feeling(s) a story can evoke from the reader. This is used in fiction ONLY!, Mood, Tone, Drama, These are the people or animals that take part in a story's action., Characters, Setting, Personification , The type of conflict that takes place in the mind of a character., External, Man vs. Man, Internal, The only example of internal conflict is ... , Man vs. Man, Man vs. Nature, Man vs. Self, The type of conflict in which a character struggles with an outside force or another person., Internal Conflict, External Conflict, Man vs. self, The qualities, attitudes, and values a character possesses., Mood, Motivates , Character Traits, The message about life; often expressed in many eras and cultures., Theme, Tone, Plot, Fiction is ..., Writing that is based on real, historical fact., Writing that contains stage directions and different parts., Writing that is told from the author's imagination., The point of view in which the narrator is someone outside of the story., First Person, Third person , Second person, The point of view in which the narrator is in the story and tells it., First Person, Second Person, Third Person, The perspective from which a story is told is called what?, Theme, Mood , Point of View, What is theme?, The main idea, What the story was about, The message the author is trying to convey, What is main idea?, What the story is mostly about, What the whole story is about, The message the author is trying to convey, What do you call the feeling the author creates for the reader?, Tone, Mood, Author's Purpose, The main character of the story is the ..., Antagonist , Protagonist , Flat character, The character in a story who causes conflict for the main character is the ..., Hero, Protaonist , Antagonist , This point of view is when narrator uses pronouns like "I," "me," or "my", First person, Third Person, Second person, Author develop characters using ..., background and setting, details and descriptions, direct and indirect characterization, conflict and climax, Why a character does what he/she does is ..., characterization, character motivation, character v. character, character excuses, A character who stays the same from the beginning to the end of the story., round, flat, dynamic, static, A character who changes as the story progresses., round, flat, dynamic, static, A character the reader learns a great deal about., round, flat, dynamic, static, A background character that the reader learns very little about., round, flat, dynamic, static, The type of figurative language where an object/item represents something else., allusion, imagery, symbolism, personification, The type of figurative language that relates to the five senses., allusion, imagery, symbolism, simile, The type of figurative language that hints at something else from the past or to a historical or famous person or historical event., allusion, alliteration, simile, metaphor, How readers get to know a character is called ..., conflict, climax, characterization, casting.
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Literary Elements, Figurative Language, Literary Elements, Plot
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Literary Analysis
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