Top Banner
Figurative Language Story Elements Author Techniques Themes And Archetypes Writing 100 200 300 400 500 100 100 100 100 400 300 200 500 200 300 400 500 300 400 500 200 200 300 400 500 FINAL JEOPARDY!
53

Figurative Language

Feb 25, 2016

Download

Documents

Tiara

Figurative Language. Story Elements. Author Techniques. Themes And Archetypes. Writing. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. 500. FINAL JEOPARDY!. Figurative Language- 100. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language

StoryElements

AuthorTechniques

Themes And

ArchetypesWriting

100

200

300

400

500

100 100 100 100

400

300

200

500

200

300

400

500

300

400

500

200 200

300

400

500

FINAL JEOPARDY!

Page 2: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language- 100

The underlined phrase is an example of this:

“George Bergeron correctly identified the earthquake, and well he might have—for many was the time his own home had danced to the same crashing tune…”

Page 3: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language - 100

BACK

Answer:

Personification

Page 4: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language - 200

When the opposite of what one expects to happen occurs

Page 5: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Irony

BACK

Figurative Language - 200

Page 6: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language - 300

“Every window a loud yellow illumination” is an example of this.

Page 7: Figurative  Language

Answer:

BACK

Figurative Language - 300

Metaphor

Page 8: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language - 400

“His anger evaporated” is an example of this.

Page 9: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Imagery

BACK

Figurative Language - 400

Page 10: Figurative  Language

Figurative Language - 500

“Maggie can’t appreciate these quilts! She’d probably be backward enough to put them to everyday use” is an example of this.

Page 11: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Irony

BACK

Figurative Language - 500

Page 12: Figurative  Language

Story Elements - 100

List and explain the 5 major elements of story progression

Page 13: Figurative  Language

BACK

Story Elements - 100

Answer:

Exposition— background information

Rising action— events increasing in tension

Climax— the critical moment of the story; most suspenseful

Falling action— events that occur due to the climax

Denouement— tying up of loose ends

Page 14: Figurative  Language

Story Elements - 200

The point of no return in a story

Page 15: Figurative  Language

BACK

Story Elements - 200

Answer:

Climax

Page 16: Figurative  Language

Story Elements - 300

List and define the 3 ways a narrator can view a story

Page 17: Figurative  Language

BACK

Story Elements - 300

Answer:

1st person—a character in the story3rd person limited—not in the story

and only knows one person’s thoughts3rd person omniscient—not in the

story and knows everyone’s thoughts

Page 18: Figurative  Language

Story Elements - 400

A character in a story can either change or not change. Those two types of characters are…

Page 19: Figurative  Language

Answer:

DynamicStatic

BACK

Story Elements - 400

Page 20: Figurative  Language

Story Elements - 500

Three elements that contribute to the rising action

Page 21: Figurative  Language

Answer:

ComplicationsConflictRising tension

BACK

Story Elements - 500

Page 22: Figurative  Language

Author Techniques - 100

An author’s fingerprint of the way he writes

Page 23: Figurative  Language

BACK

Author Techniques - 100

Answer:

Style

Page 24: Figurative  Language

Author Techniques - 200

3 ways a writer can create a creepy mood

Page 25: Figurative  Language

Answer:

A creaky door openedClowns (depending on the context)Objects doing something they shouldn’t

(empty swing swinging)

BACK

Author Techniques - 200

Page 26: Figurative  Language

Author Techniques - 300

How an essayist differs from a fiction writer when it comes to theme

Page 27: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Essayist often states the theme directly (thesis), but the fiction writer doesn’t

BACK

Author Techniques - 300

Page 28: Figurative  Language

Author Techniques - 400

The narrator in “The Sweet Life in Kumansenu” does this when he tells us about the father through his actions

Page 29: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Indirect characterization

BACK

Author Techniques - 400

Page 30: Figurative  Language

Author Techniques - 500

“To enter into that silence that was the city at eight o’ clock of a misty evening in November, to put your feet upon that buckling concrete walk, to step over grassy seams and make your way, hands in pockets, through the silences, that was what Mr. Leonard Mead most dearly loved to do” is an example of this

Page 31: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Mood

BACK

Author Techniques - 500

Page 32: Figurative  Language

Themes and Archetypes - 100

The common theme of a story whose main character is reaching adulthood

Page 33: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Coming of ageLoss of Innocence

BACK

Themes and Archetypes - 100

Page 34: Figurative  Language

Themes and Archetypes - 200

A strong willed woman that is often in charge of her family

Page 35: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Earth Mother

BACK

Themes and Archetypes - 200

Page 36: Figurative  Language

Themes and Archetypes - 300

The common archetype you often find in stories such as “The Pedestrian”

Page 37: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Rugged Individualist

BACK

Themes and Archetypes - 300

Page 38: Figurative  Language

Themes and Archetypes - 400

The common theme in a story where a character experiences a cultural crossroads and has to choose what path to take

Page 39: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Struggle with self

BACK

Themes and Archetypes - 400

Page 40: Figurative  Language

Themes and Archetypes - 500

This archetype can appear in one of two ways: 1) someone who jokes around for fun2) one who fools others to be mean

Page 41: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Trickster

BACK

Themes and Archetypes - 500

Page 42: Figurative  Language

Writing - 100

The five stages, in order, of the writing process

Page 43: Figurative  Language

Answer: PrewritingOutliningDraftingRevision

Final

BACK

Writing - 100

Page 44: Figurative  Language

Writing - 200

The point of view in a formal essay

Page 45: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Third person

BACK

Writing - 200

Page 46: Figurative  Language

Writing - 300

3 of the ____ prewriting strategies

Page 47: Figurative  Language

BACK

Writing - 300

Answer:

Page 48: Figurative  Language

Writing - 400

Asking a thoughtful question or creating a mental picture are 2 ways to do this

Page 49: Figurative  Language

Answer:

Begin an essay

BACK

Writing - 400

Page 50: Figurative  Language

Writing - 500

2 functions of a paragraph’s topic sentence

Page 51: Figurative  Language

Answer:1) Introduce the topic of the

paragraph2) Tie into the thesis of the paper

BACK

Writing - 500

Page 52: Figurative  Language

FINAL JEOPARDYWhen doing research, list the important

parts of a source that must be documented.

Discuss why proper documentation is necessary.

Page 53: Figurative  Language

AnswerAuthorTitle of book or websitePage numbersOrganizationPublisherDate accessed

It is important to properly document your sources because otherwise you would be stealing someone else’s work. Tthey deserve credit for their work