Standards Vocabulary

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Tone

Attitude a writer takes toward the audience, a subject, or a character

central idea

The most important point(s) the author makes (main idea)

Figurative Language

words or phrases with non-literal meanings used for comparisons or clarity, usually evoking strong images.

Metaphor

A comparison without using like or as

Personification

A figure of speech in which an object or animal is given human feelings, thoughts, or attitudes

Stanza

A group of lines in a poem

Simile

A comparison using "like" or "as"

Mood

How the reader feels about the text while reading.

Denotation

The dictionary definition of a word

Claim

What the author believes is true

Analogy

a comparison between two things to help explain or illustrate one or both of them.

Objective Summary

a conveying of the main ideas of a text WITHOUT opinions

Suspense

a state or feeling of excited or anxious uncertainty about what may happen.

Allusion

a textual reference to another literary, political, mythological, or religious contemporary work, text, or event.

Rhyme

a word pattern that reflects the same sound sequence at the ends of words (e.g., tail/pail/sale; hat/cat/bat).

impact

an effect or result

Connotation

an idea or feeling that a word makes

Adage

an old or well-known saying that expresses a truth.

Counterclaim

arguments or evidence that conflict the author's claim

provoke

cause action

Sufficient

enough to accomplish the task.

Rebuttal

explaining why the opposing claim is wrong or not string enough

sound

facts, not debatable, should be logical

relevant

on topic, relates to the point

Inference

our ideas of the meanings of words that are unstated (educated guess)

Dramatic Irony

readers know something important which the characters do not.

Explicit evidence

stated clearly and in detail, leaving no room for confusion or doubt. Think QUOTES

Narrative

story structure

Formal Style

style characterized by complex, objective, and precise use of language. Not how you would talk to friends

Theme

the lesson or message in a text.

Purpose

the reason for writing a text (e.g., to persuade, to inform, to argue, to define, to describe, etc.).

Plot Structure

the sequence of events in a story.

propel

to cause to move towards; push

Delineate

to determine the exact points of the argument or discussion .

assess

to evaluate; determine if it meets expectations

analyze

to look at something carefully by attention to its parts

Refine

to make more clear

Cite

to quote or refer to a source, as used to support a statement or claim.

reveal

to show


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