1 / 38

ANSWER: CONNOTATION

This is the suggested or implied meaning or meaning or emotion associated with a word- beyond its literal definition- The feeling the word gives . Hint: positive or negative_________. ANSWER: CONNOTATION . An appeal to the reader’s sense of emotion. ANSWER: PATHOS .

nelson
Télécharger la présentation

ANSWER: CONNOTATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. This is the suggested or implied meaning or meaning or emotion associated with a word- beyond its literal definition- The feeling the word gives. Hint: positive or negative_________ ANSWER: CONNOTATION

  2. An appeal to the reader’s sense of emotion ANSWER: PATHOS

  3. The main argument in an essay or speech. What you are trying to tell your audience. • ANSWER: THESIS

  4. An idea known to many people. A known idea. • ANSWER: UNIVERSAL

  5. Facts or reasons offered to support aposition being true. • ANSWER: ARGUMENT

  6. Means between, among, during • ANSWER: PREFIX “INTER”

  7. When writing is focused or logically organized. • ANSWER: COHERENCE

  8. When an event or situation is humorous. • ANSWER: COMIC SITUATION

  9. An ad convincing the audience tosave the recycle boxes. • ANSWER: PERSUASIVE CAMPAIGN

  10. Means the “main” or “original” source. • ANSWER: PRIMARY

  11. The dictionary definition or meaning of a word. • ANSWER: DICTION

  12. The message about life in a work. One way to determine this is to pay attention to how the character changes or the lesson the character learns. • ANSWER: THEME

  13. How a work is organized, for example, problem/solution, compare/contrast, cause/effect, problem/effect. • ANSWER: • ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

  14. Believable, being trustworthy • ANSWER: CREDIBILITY

  15. To be sure to reach his or her audience and/or to make clear a point about an issue. • ANSWER: A WRITER WOULD CONSIDER THE PURPOSE, AUDIENCE, AND TONE BEFORE WRITING A PIECE.

  16. The logic or rationale about something. Often used to persuade someone using known facts. • ANSWER: LOGOS

  17. Which is the correct way to use quotation marks and in-text citation?A. Jennings, author of the short story, explains: “i wrote the story to teach young children about respect.” (Marcy).B. Jennings, author of the short story, explains, “I wrote the story to teach young children about respect” (Marcy). • ANSWER: B- Always capitalize the beginning of the quote. The period should only be written after the parenthesis.

  18. The truth about life, even though it is expressed in a humorous way. • ANSWER: ELEMENT OF TRUTH

  19. Convincing others to do what is right; because it is ethical. • ANSWER: ETHOS

  20. Root that means “likely”, “suitable”, or “appropriate” • ANSWER: ROOT “APT”

  21. Comedy that is focused on the situation or series of events. The plot takes priority over the characters therefore it is not difficult to understand. • ANSWER: LOW LEVEL COMEDY

  22. Comedy that is focused on the characters, dialogue, or ideas. It is sometimes more difficult to understand. • ANSWER: HIGH LEVEL COMEDY

  23. The greatest quantity, best. • ANSWER: MOST

  24. A short account of an event. Sometimes a short story. • ANSWER: ANECDOTE

  25. An over-exaggeration: “I’m so hungry I could eat a cow!” • ANSWER: HYPERBOLE

  26. The intended group the writer, speaker, or producer wants to reach. • ANSWER: TARGET AUDIENCE

  27. Language that is expected to result in humor, for example one-liner, puns, etc. • ANSWER: COMIC LANGUAGE

  28. How a character is described for instance, round/flat, static/dynamic, protagonist/antagonist, etc. • ANSWER: CHARACTERIZATION

  29. An over-exaggeration of a person or character’s physical features or personality. • ANSWER: CARICATURE

  30. The overall feeling the writer expects the audience to have based on his or her diction. • ANSWER: TONE

  31. A similarity between features of two things, for example, books : school :: utensils: kitchen • ANSWER: ANALOGY

  32. Verbal wit based on meanings; a play on words such as puns. • ANSWER: WORD PLAY

  33. “Don’t let Cinderella play baseball because she always runs away from the ball” is an example of a _____. • ANSWER: PUN

  34. The main idea usually in a paragraph. • ANSWER: TOPIC SENTENCE

  35. Clues in the passage , usually around the word to help you figure out the meaning of a word. • ANSWER: CONTEXT CLUES

  36. An educated guess based on the clues in the passage. • ANSWER: INFER

  37. Details to help you understand the main idea. • ANSWER: SUPPORTING DETAIL

  38. ALL DONE!!! GOOD LUCK!

More Related