

When you need a break, try one of the other activities listed below the flashcards like Matching, Snowman, or Hungry Bug.Īlthough it may feel like you're playing a game, your brain is still making more connections with the information to help you out. If you are logged in to your account, this website will remember which cards you know and don't know so that theyĪre in the same box the next time you log in. LEFT ARROW - move card to the Don't know pile.You can also use your keyboard to move the cards as follows: If you've accidentally put the card in the wrong box, just click on the card to take it out of the box. When you've placed seven or more cards in the Don't know box, click "retry" to try those cards again. If you knew the answer, click the green Know box. Look at the large card and try to recall what is on the other side. Use these flashcards to help memorize information. The narrator exists outside the events of the story, and relates the actions of the characters by referring to their names or by the third-person pronouns he, she, or they.Ī struggle between opposing forces the problem in a storyĪ group of lines, usually similar in length and pattern, that form a unit within a poemĬomparison between two unlike things in which one thing becomes another - "like" or "as" NOT used to compare themĬomparison of two unlike things, using the words "like" or "as" The narrator is a person in the story, telling the story from their own point of view usually utilizes the pronoun I (or we, if the narrator is speaking as part of a group). The outcome of the conflict of the story, when lose ends are wrapped up Imaginative language that is not meant to be interpreted literallyĪ type of writing that tells a story or describes a sequence of events in an incidentĮvents that give the reader background information needed to understand a storyĪ traditional story that explains the actions of gods or heroes or the origins of the elements of natureĪn object, a person, or a place that stands for something elseĮvents after the climax of story but before the resolution The turning point or high point of a story

Major events that develop the plot of a story and lead to the climax The central idea, message, or purpose of a literary work Unit 1 ELA Vocab Unit 1 ELA Vocabulary Terms QuestionĪ category or type of literature, such as a short story, folk-tale, poem, novel, or play
