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Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.

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Presentation on theme: "Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where I have “Question” should be the student’s response. To enter your questions and answers, click once on the text on the slide, then highlight and just type over what’s there to replace it. If you hit Delete or Backspace, it sometimes makes the text box disappear. When clicking on the slide to move to the next appropriate slide, be sure you see the hand, not the arrow. (If you put your cursor over a text box, it will be an arrow and WILL NOT take you to the right location.)

3 Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.

4 Click here for Final Jeopardy

5 Literary Terms Writing Papers Literary Terms 3 10 Points 20 Points 30 Points 40 Points 50 Points 10 Points10 Points10 Points10 Points 20 Points 30 Points 40 Points 50 Points 30 Points 40 Points 50 Points Literary Terms 2 Miscellaneous

6 A subject and verb must agree in this way.

7 What is number?

8 A pronoun and antecedent must agree in these two ways.

9 What are number and gender?

10 When two statements have an opposite meanings.

11 What is a contradiction?

12 You put this in parenthesis when crediting a source in a paper.

13 What is the author or title and the page number?

14 When you do not need to cite a source in a paper.

15 What is common knowledge?

16 The point of view from which To Kill A Mockingbird is told.

17 What is first- person?

18 A direct comparison: Ann is a walking encyclopedia.

19 What is a metaphor?

20 An example is “buzz” or “tick tock”

21 What is onomatopoeia?

22 The attitude the writer takes towards his/her subject.

23 What is tone?

24 When what happens in a story is not what is expected to happen.

25 What is situational irony?

26 A comparison using like or as.

27 What is a simile?

28 An example is She Sells Sea Shells by the Sea Shore

29 What is alliteration?

30 When Antony says this to Caesar: “Fear him [Cassius] not, Caesar, he’s not dangerous. He is a noble Roman, and well given” (1.2.196-197)

31 What is dramatic irony? (When the audience knows something the character does not.)

32 Two examples (underlined): The lumber company downsized. They got rid of the deadwood. I’m very picky about my hair, so a strange barber just won’t cut it.

33 What is a pun? Lumber – deadwood Hair - cut

34 An example from To Kill a Mockingbird is when Scout narrates, “Maycomb County had recently been told that it had nothing to fear but fear itself” (6).

35 What is an allusion?

36 The last sentence of the introduction.

37 What is the thesis statement?

38 The order of citations on a works cited page.

39 What is alphabetical order by author or title?

40 This is what is done to the title of a novel when it is written or typed.

41 What is italicized or underlined?

42 This is the first sentence of every body paragraph.

43 What is the topic sentence?

44 This is what goes into a topic outline.

45 What are the body paragraphs? (topic sentences and support)

46 When a story ends like it began or where it began.

47 What is circular structure?

48 When a text is open to several interpretations.

49 What is ambiguous?

50 Fine distinctions in a text.

51 What are subtleties?

52 This evokes an overall feeling of empathy for Tom Robinson in To Kill a Mockingbird.

53 What is mood?

54 When authors’ opinions are based on prejudice they reveal this.

55 What is bias?

56 Make your wager

57 Julius Caesar is this type of play and uses those three types of irony.

58 What is tragedy as well as verbal, situational, and dramatic irony?


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