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Category A: Review for EOCT Category B: Who Is It? Category C: More Than One Category D: Find the Error... Category E: In Your Own Words...

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Presentation on theme: "Category A: Review for EOCT Category B: Who Is It? Category C: More Than One Category D: Find the Error... Category E: In Your Own Words..."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Category A: Review for EOCT Category B: Who Is It? Category C: More Than One Category D: Find the Error... Category E: In Your Own Words...

3 11111 2 3 2222 3 4 333 4 555 444 55 Category A Category D Category C Category B Category E

4 Category A for 1 Question: the sequence of events in a literary work Check your answer

5 Category A for 1 Answer: plot Back to the Game Board

6 Category A for 2 Question: the way an author reveals his/her characters; can be done directly or indirectly Check your answer

7 Category A for 2 Answer: characterization Back to the Game Board

8 Category A for 3 Question: time and place of a literary work Check your answer

9 Category A for 3 Answer: setting Back to the Game Board

10 Category A for 4 Question: the character or voice from whose point of view events are told Check your answer

11 Category A for 4 Answer: narrator Back to the Game Board

12 Category A for 5 Question: the perspective from which a story is told Check your answer

13 Category A for 5 Answer: point of view Back to the Game Board

14 Category B for 1 Question: the main character in a story/novel Check your answer

15 Category B for 1 Answer: protagonist Back to the Game Board

16 Category B for 2 Question: the character or force that opposes the protagonist Check your answer

17 Category B for 2 Answer: antagonist Back to the Game Board

18 Category B for 3 Question: almost always a round or three-dimensional character, often grows or progresses to a higher understanding in the course of the story/novel Check your answer

19 Category B for 3 Answer: major character Back to the Game Board

20 Category B for 4 Question: almost always a flat or two-dimensional character, usually does not change within the course of the story/novel Check your answer

21 Category B for 4 Answer: minor character Back to the Game Board

22 Category B for 5 Question: a character who provides a contrast to the protagonist Check your answer

23 Category B for 5 Answer: foil Back to the Game Board

24 Category C for 1 Question: struggle between opposing forces; can be external or internal Check your answer

25 Category C for 1 Answer: conflict Back to the Game Board

26 Category C for 2 Question: a book of long narrative in prose, usually including a complicated plot, many major and minor characters, several interrelated themes, and several settings Check your answer

27 Category C for 2 Answer: novel Back to the Game Board

28 Category C for 3 Question: each main character has a separate but related storyline that merges in the end Check your answer

29 Category C for 3 Answer: parallel plots Back to the Game Board

30 Category C for 4 Question: meaningful pattern in a literary work; any recurring element that has symbolic significance in the story/novel Check your answer

31 Category C for 4 Answer: motif Back to the Game Board

32 Category C for 5 Question: two unlike things are compared in several ways Check your answer

33 Category C for 5 Answer: extended metaphor Back to the Game Board

34 Category D for 1 Question: Whose at bat? Check your answer

35 Category D for 1 Answer: Who is at bat? Back to the Game Board

36 Category D for 2 Question: Its roaring, and I cannot stand to listen to the sound. Check your answer

37 Category D for 2 Answer: It’s roaring, and I cannot stand to listen to the sound. Back to the Game Board

38 Category D for 3 Question: You’re friend is busy. Check your answer

39 Category D for 3 Answer: Your friend is busy. Back to the Game Board

40 Category D for 4 Question: I cannot find my kite, and I heard the children claim that kite as there’s. Check your answer

41 Category D for 4 Answer: I cannot find my kite, and I heard the children claim that kite as theirs. Back to the Game Board

42 Category D for 5 Question: They’re trees are tall, and I cannot climb them. Check your answer

43 Category D for 5 Answer: Their trees are tall, and I cannot climb them. Back to the Game Board

44 Category E for 1 Question: Define “theme” in your own words. Check your answer

45 Category E for 1 Answer: Theme is defined as a main idea or an underlying meaning of a literary work Back to the Game Board

46 Category E for 2 Question: Explain the difference between a major character and a minor character. Check your answer

47 Category E for 2 Answer: Major characters are vital to the development and resolution of the conflict. In other words, the plot and resolution of conflict revolves around these characters. Minor characters serve to complement the major characters and help move the plot events forward. Back to the Game Board

48 Category E for 3 Question: List two different types of external conflicts. Check your answer

49 Category E for 3 Answer: Man versus man: A situation in which two characters have opposing desires or interests. The typical scenario is a conflict between the protagonist and antagonist. Man versus nature: In this type of conflict, a character is tormented by natural forces such as storms or animals. Back to the Game Board

50 Category E for 4 Question: Explain the difference between an antagonist and a foil. Check your answer

51 Category E for 4 Answer: The foil doesn’t have to be necessarily negative or an opponent of the protagonist, rather he portrays traits which magnify the protagonist’s qualities. An antagonist is an opposing force, negative character, or destructive situation which necessarily works against the plans and schemes of the protagonist. Back to the Game Board

52 Category E for 5 Question: Give an example of a “motif.” Check your answer

53 Category E for 5 Answer: A motif in To Kill a Mockingbird is the characters that symbolize innocence: mockingbirds (Such as Tom Robinson and Mayella Ewell) Back to the Game Board


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