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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 I.
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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.
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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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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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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.
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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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.
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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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.
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.
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.
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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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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 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.
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.
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.
Instructions for using this template.
2E Analyzing Literary Elements
Literary Terms.
Literary Terms.
Literary Devices Narrative Elements
Vocabulary Review.
Welcome to Jeopardy.
Literary Elements Expository texts – a short nonfiction work about a particular subject. They give information, discuss ideas or explain a process. Fiction.
Literary Terms.
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Presentation transcript:

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.)

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

Click here for Final Jeopardy

Figurative Language Literary Devices Author’s Purpose Author’s Tools Vocabulary Story Elements

A comparison using like or as

What is a simile?

When an object or animal is given human characteristics

What is personification?

A comparison by saying one thing is another not using like or as; some are stated directly and some are implied

What is a metaphor?

A deliberate exaggeration

What is a hyperbole?

Words that create mental pictures that appeal to one or more of the five senses

What is imagery?

A reference made to something that is not directly mentioned

What is an allusion?

Words that sound like what they are describing.

What is onomatopoeia?

Repetition of a sound at the beginning of two or more words

What is alliteration?

Flow of language having regular accented beats

What is rhythm?

Use of words to express the opposite of what one really means; An unexpected ending

What is irony?

The most important idea of a paragraph or selection

What is main idea?

The sequence of events in a short story, novel, or play

What is plot?

The struggle between a character and an opposing force; problem

What is conflict?

The highest point of action in a story; turning point

What is climax?

When and where a story takes place

What is setting?

The atmosphere or feeling in a passage; Created through description and setting.

What is mood?

An important truth about life expressed by the author of a passage.

What is theme?

Written for the audience’s enjoyment,

What is to entertain?

Written to provide information

What is to inform?

Written to talk the audience into something

What is to persuade?

The vantage point from which the narrator tells the story. 1st person – uses I or we 3rd person – uses he, she, or they

What is point of view?

The tension readers feel because they are uncertain how events are going to turn out.

What is suspense?

The part a character plays in a story or drama

What is role?

What someone has directly stated usually in quotation marks “”

What are quotations?

What is a moral?

A lesson to be learned from a story

A picture or drawing of something

What is illustration?

A relative position or combination of events at a particular moment

What is situation?

An explanation or description of a picture

What is caption?

To cover the main points of a passage briefly

What is to summarize?

When something stands for something else

What is to symbolize?

Make your wager

To make an “educated guess” based on the passage of what will happen

What is a prediction?