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Read each question and possible answers carefully.Read each question and possible answers carefully. Click on the answer the you think is correct.Click.

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Presentation on theme: "Read each question and possible answers carefully.Read each question and possible answers carefully. Click on the answer the you think is correct.Click."— Presentation transcript:

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3 Read each question and possible answers carefully.Read each question and possible answers carefully. Click on the answer the you think is correct.Click on the answer the you think is correct. If you are correct you will advance to the next question. If you are wrong, go back to the question and try again.If you are correct you will advance to the next question. If you are wrong, go back to the question and try again. Keep track of how many questions you get correct.Keep track of how many questions you get correct. As you go along make a list of terms with which you have trouble.As you go along make a list of terms with which you have trouble. This button will bring you back to the rules screen.

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5 The author’s purpose is The author’s topic. The author’s intent. The author’s conclusion. The title.

6 Context clues are Information from the text that defines the word Cause and effect statements The center of interest Diagrams that help show relationships

7 An expository text… Is meant to entertain Tells a fictional story Tries to persuade the reader Informs the reader about a topic

8 Dialogue when used in a literary work is… An example of a simile Conversation between people An exaggeration A poem recited by a character

9 The moral of the story The opinion of one of the characters events that took place before the story began events that may occur in the future When an author uses a ‘flashback’, it is meant to present

10 An exaggeration or an overstatement A comparison of two unlike things using like or as A rhyming pattern used in poetry The use of a word to mean the exact opposite A hyperbole is…

11 If you are making an inference, you are… Making a personal connection Summarizing the story Forming an opinion about a character Forming a judgment based on reasoning

12 The plot is the… The structure of a story The author’s purpose The emotions shown by the characters The tone the author uses

13 Which of the following is an example of an alliteration? “She was as small as a mouse.” “The bear bounded bellowing in the briar patch.” “The tree smiled as it soaked up the rain.” “The horn was so loud it blew my ears off!”

14 Which of the following is an example of personification? The dog barked like a lion roaring. The sun suffocated the desert. Boom, bang, bump. The toy fell down the stairs. An apple a day keeps the doctor away.

15 Click Here To See What You’ve Won!

16 AND… Credits

17 End Game


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