| A | B | 
| FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE | beyond literal meaning of words to create special effects or feelings | 
| NONFICTION | This is factual writing that presents and explains ideas | 
| LITERATURE | This is the body of written works that includes prose and poetry | 
| MEMOIR | account of the personal experiences of an author | 
| CONFLICT | This is the main problem in a literary work. | 
| FICTION | This is writing that tells about imaginary characters | 
| AUTOBIOGRAPHY | This is the story of a person's life written by that person | 
| PREFIX | This can be added to the beginning of a word to change the word's meaning | 
| SCENE | This is a small division of a play that usually happens in a particular place and time | 
| ONOMATOPOEIA | This is the use of words that sound like the noises | 
| DRAMA | This is a story written to be performed by actors. | 
| METAPHOR | This is a direct comparison of two unlike things | 
| CHARACTERIZATION | This is the combination of ways that an author shows a person is like | 
| RISING ACTION | This is the part of the plot where the conflict and and suspense build | 
| Alliteration | This is the repetition of initial consonant sounds at the beginnings of words. | 
| Allusion | This is the reference to a person, place, or event from history, literature, or religion with which a reader is likely to be familiar. | 
| Autobiography | This is the story of a person's life written by that person. | 
| Biography | The story of a person's life written by another person. | 
| Climax | This is the part of the plot where the conflict and tension reach a peak. It is the turning point of the plot. | 
| Decode | This is when we analyze a spoken or written word to discover its pronunciation or meaning. | 
| Drama | This is a story written to be performed by actors. | 
| Fiction | This is writing that tells about imaginary characters and events. | 
| Figurative Language | This goes beyond the literal meanings of words to create special effects or feelings. | 
| Foreshadowing | This is the use of hints in written works about what will happen later. | 
| Genre | This is the category or type of literature. | 
| Hyperbole | This is extreme exaggeration used in a literary work. | 
| Irony | This is the contrast between appearance and reality or what is expected and what actually happens. | 
| Legend | This is a story about mythical beings or supernatural events, usually originally told orally for generations before being written down. | 
| Literature | This is the body of written works that includes prose and poetry. | 
| Main Idea | This is the central and most important idea of a reading passage. | 
| Memoir | This is an account of the personal experiences of an author. | 
| Metaphor | This is a direct comparison of two unlike things without using the words "like" or "as." | 
| Meter | This is the rhythm or regular sound pattern in a piece of poetry. | 
| Motivation | This is the wants, needs, or beliefs that cause a character to act or react in a particular way. | 
| Narrative Poem | This tells a story in verse. | 
| Nonfiction | This is factual writing that presents and explains ideas or that tells about real people, places, objects, or events. | 
| Onomatopoeia | This is the use of words that sound like the noises they describe. | 
| Personification | This is a type of figurative language in which human qualities are given to nonhuman things. | 
| Prefix | This can be added to the beginning of a word to change the word's meaning. | 
| Rising Action | This is the part of the plot where the conflict and suspense build. | 
| Root Word | This is a word related in origin, as certain words in genetically related languages descended from the same ancestral root. It is the part of the word after all affixes have been removed. | 
| Scene | This is a small division of a play that usually happens in a particular time and place. | 
| Setting | This is the time and place in which a literary work happens. | 
| Simile | This is a comparison of two unlike things using the terms "like" or "as". | 
| Subplot | This is a secondary plot in a work of literature that either explains or helps to develop the main plot. | 
| Suffix | This can be added to the end of a word to change the word's meaning. | 
| Active Voice | This is used when the subject of a sentence performs the action. | 
| Advertisement | This is a public announcement promoting a product or service. | 
| Analogy | This is a comparison based on a similarity between things that are otherwise dissimilar. | 
| Anecdote | This is a brief story about an interesting incident. | 
| Cause And Effect | This is the relationship between two or more events in which one event brings about another. | 
| Connotation | This is the emotional feelings and associations that go beyond the dictionary definition of a word. | 
| Context Clues | These are in the text surrounding a word and give hints for the meaning of the word. | 
| Critique | This is a written or spoken evaluation of what is and is not effective in a literary work. | 
| Denotation | This is the dictionary definition of a word. | 
| Dialogue | These are the words spoken by characters in a literary work. | 
| Diction | This is the writer's choice of words, including the vocabulary used, the appropriateness of the words, and the vividness of the language. | 
| Editorial | This is an article in a publication or a commentary on television or radio expressing the opinion of its editors, publishers, station, or network. | 
| Essay | This is a short, nonfiction work about a particular subject. | 
| Fact | This is a statement that can be proved to be true. | 
| Fluency | This is the ability to speak, read, or write a language; automatic word recognition, decoding, and checking for meaning. | 
| Implied Meaning | This is a suggested, but not stated, definition. | 
| Inference | This is reading between the lines. It is taking something that you read and putting it together with something that you already know to make sense of what you read. | 
| Media | This is the main means of mass communication. | 
| Monologue | This is a long, uninterrupted speech by a character in a play, story, or poem. | 
| Mood | This is the feeling that an author wants readers to have while reading. | 
| Novel | This is a long work of fiction. It has a complicated plot, many characters, a significant theme, and varied settings. | 
| Opinion | This is a statement that reflects a writer's belief about a topic , and it cannot be proved. | 
| Paraphrase | This is the restatement of a written work in one's own words that keeps the basic meaning of the original work. | 
| Passive Voice | This is used when the subject of a sentence receives the action instead of doing it. | 
| Point Of View | This is the perspective from which a story is told. | 
| Short Story | This is a brief work of fiction. It resembles a novel but his a simpler plot and setting and fewer characters. | 
| Speech | This is a talk or public address. | 
| Strategy | This is any kind of mental action used by a student to comprehend and make meaning out of a reading text. | 
| Style | This is the way an author expresses ideas through the use of kinds of words, literary devices, and sentence structure. | 
| Text | This is the main body of a piece of writing or any of the various forms in which writing exists, such as a book, a poem, an article, or a short story. | 
| Theme | This is the message, usually about life or society, that an author wishes to convey through a literary work. | 
| Tone | This is the attitude that an author takes toward the audience, the subject, or a character. | 
| Transcript | This documentation is the record in printed form of what was said. |