Lexia Learning
verbal irony
A figure of speech in which what is said is the opposite of what is meant (sarcasm)
noun
A person, place, thing, or idea
complex sentence
A sentence with one independent clause and at least one dependent clause
argument
A statement put forth and supported by evidence to support a claim
external conflict
A struggle between a character and an outside force
internal conflict
A struggle between opposing needs, desires, or emotions within a single character
pronoun
A word that takes the place of a noun
Which article is used before a vowel sound?
An
autobiography
An account of a person's life written by that person
verb
An action word or state of being
situational irony
An outcome that turns out to be very different from what was expected
Tone
Attitude a writer takes toward the audience, a subject, or a character
Exposition
Background information presented in a literary work.
Theme
Central idea of a work of literature
contrast
Difference between things
Resolution
End of the story where loose ends are tied up
Drop the e rules
Ends in an e and the suffix STARTS with a vowel.
Drop the y rules
Ends in y, a consonant before the y, and suffix DOESN'T start with i.
falling action
Events after the climax, leading to the resolution
rising action
Events leading up to the climax
An independent clause
Expresses a complete thought and can stand alone as a sentence.
supporting ideas
Facts and examples or other details that explain the main idea
Mood
Feeling or atmosphere that a writer creates for the reader
compare
Give an account of the similarities between two (or more) items or situations, referring to both (all) of them throughout.
A Clause
Has both a subject and a predicate.
A dependent phrase
Has to have more added to be a complete sentence and can not stand alone.
A phrase
Is missing either a subject or a predicate.
Conjunction
It joins words or groups of words
articles
It signals a noun. A, An, & The
Climax
Most exciting moment of the story; turning point
Simple Sentence
One verb and one noun or two verbs and one noun or one verb and two nouns
1-1-1 Doubling Rule
One vowel, One consonant after the vowel, and one syllable.
transition words
Phrases that signal a change from one idea to another. ex: first, second, finally, and then....
pronoun
Replaces a noun or another pronoun
Types of Adjectives
Tells what kind, which one, or how many.
cause
The reason why something happens
/zhun/
The sound made by -sion. i.e. conclusion or
/shun/
The sound that is sometimes made by -tion or -sion. i.e. reflection or suppression
Setting
The time and place of a story
subject of a text
The topic of a text. What the text is about.
antecedent
The word that the pronoun replaced.
main idea
What the passage is mostly about
irony
When the last thing you expect to happen, happens.
summary
a brief statement or account of the main points of something.
drama
a dramatic work intended for performance by actors on a stage
informational text
a nonfiction text, written to share factual information
subject pronoun
a pronoun used as the subject of a sentence
effect
a result or consequence
caption
a title or short description of a picture
stage directions
an instruction in the text of a play, especially one indicating the movement, position, or tone of an actor, or the sound effects and lighting.
coordinating conjunction
and, but, or, yet, so, for, nor
compound-complex sentence
at least one dependent clause and two or more independent clauses
subordinating conjunction
connects an independent clause with one or more dependent clauses; examples: since, before, unless, however, after
Dialogue
conversation between two or more characters
adjective
describes a noun
text features
elements of any text other than the writing itself which helps you locate and learn information
singular possessive
man's, child's, boy's, dog's
plural possessive
men's, children's. boys', dogs'
plural
more than one
details of a text
pieces of information that describe or support
demonstrative pronoun
points out a person, place, thing, or idea examples: this, those, that
interrogative pronoun
pronoun that asks a question; examples: who, whom, whose, what, which
contraction
putting two words together in a shortened form
biography
story of a person's life written by another person
Narrative
tells a story
adverb
tells how the verb happened
predicate
tells what the subject does or is
italics
text that is slanted to the right
simple subject
the noun of the subject
object pronoun
the pronoun used as the direct object
simple predicate
the verb in the predicate
compound sentence
two or more independent clauses
An example of an object pronoun
us or them
An example of a subject pronoun
we or I
dramatic irony
when a reader is aware of something that a character isn't
subject
who or what the sentence is all about
heading
words at the top of a text that give the subject
subheading
words that label shorter parts of the text