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Reading Terms. Study Review. Genres. Biography? The story of a person’s life as told by someone other than the person. Click Here. Genres. Autobiography The story of a person’s life as told by the person. Click Here. Genres. Fable
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Reading Terms Study Review
Genres • Biography? • The story of a person’s life as told by someone other than the person. Click Here
Genres • Autobiography • The story of a person’s life as told by the person. Click Here
Genres • Fable • A type of fairy story with talking animals as characters which is meant to teach a lesson or moral. Click Here
Genres • Fairy Tale • A story that is set long ago and far away, usually does not have a known author, and it has an element of magic. Click Here
Genre’s • Trickster Tale • A type of story from Africa in which one of the characters tricks another of the characters. The trick usually resolves the story. Click Here
Genres • Historical Fiction • A fictional story that has people from history as characters or is set during actual historical events. Click Here
Genres • Tall Tale • A funny story that uses many exaggerations about an American hero. This type of story was invented in the United States. Click Here
Genres • Short Story • A story with characters and a plot that is completely resolved within 20 pages or less. Click Here
Literary Devices • Simile • A comparison of two unlike things using like or as to create an image (word picture). Is like Click Here
Literary Devices • Metaphor • A comparison of two unlike things in which one of them is described as the other. The description is meant to create an image (word picture.) Jesus is the good shepherd! Click Here
Literary Devices • Onomatopoeia • Words that sound like what they mean such as bang, clang, clank, clamor, ring, etc. Click Here
Literary Devices • Irony • The written words mean something other than their actual or literal meaning. Spoken irony usually is expressed as sarcasm. Click Here
Literary Devices • Foreshadowing • Foreshadowing is when the narrator (person telling the story) gives clues or hints to later story events early in the story. Click Here
Literary Devices • Flashback • In a flashback the action of a story goes back to a previous time to explain something that is happening in the present. Click Here
Literary Devices • Idiom • An idiom is a simile or metaphor that is commonly used in every day speech. Usually the people who live in a area recognized the meaning of the idiom when they hear it. For example, “Don’t cross your bridges before you come to them!” or “Between a rock and a hard place!” Tied himself in knots! Click Here
Literary Devices • Personification • Personification is giving human characteristics to an object or an animal. Click Here
Literary Devices • Dialect • Dialect is writing the dialogue in a story as if a person is speaking it. Dialect reflects a characters’ regional accent and word choices. Click Here
Literary Devices • Exaggerations • Exaggerations are when the author purposely makes a characters abilities or accomplishments larger than life for comic effect. Click Here
Plot Elements • Plot • The events that happen in the story in the order that they happen. Click Here
Plot Elements • Name the elements of a plot. • Exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution. Click Here
Plot elements • Exposition • Exposition introduces the characters, the setting and background information which makes the plot understandable. Click Here
Plot Elements • Rising Action • Rising Action introduces the conflict. Click Here
Plot Elements • Climax • Climax is the most exciting thing that happens in a story or it is the turning point for the main characters story. Click Here
Plot Elements • Falling Action • Falling Action resolves the conflict of the story. Click Here
Plot Elements • Resolution • Resolution is the end of the story. It ties up all loose ends in the story and gives the reader a sense of what will happen after the story. Click Here
Plot Elements • Theme • Theme is the lesson that the reader or the protagonist (main character) learns from the story. Click Here
Plot Elements • Universal Theme • The universal theme is a value held by many people in many different cultures. Click Here
Plot Elements • Conflict • Conflict is the problem between the protagonist (main character) and the antagonist in the story. Click Here
Plot Elements • Background Information • Background information is information given in the story about a character’s backstory or events that led up to the conflict between the protagonist (main story) and the antagonist. Background information does not take place in the story itself. Click Here
Plot Elements • Mood or tone • Mood or tone is the feeling of a story. Click Here
Characters • Protagonist • The protagonist is the main character in the story. Click Here
Characters • Antagonist • Antagonist is the character, object or event that has a conflict with the main character or protagonist. The antagonist can be a character, an event or the protagonist if the conflict is internal. Click Here
Characters • Pivotal characters • Pivotal characters are not the protagonist or antagonist in a story but are important to the plot of a story. Click Here
Characters • What is the character’s motivation? • A character’s motivation is the reason a character behaves the way he does. Click Here
Characters • Dialogue • Dialogue is what a character says in a story. A dialogue occurs between two or more characters. If a character is talking to himself it is a monologue. Click Here
Characters • Direct Characterization • In Direct characterization the leader learns about the character’s looks, abilities, hopes, dreams, etc. through a direct description in the story. Click Here
Character • Indirect Characterization • In indirect characterization the reader learns about a character’s abilities, dreams, hopes, etc. by what the character says and does and by what other characters say about him. Click Here
Point of View • Narrator • The narrator is the person telling the story. Click Here
Point of View • Point of view • Point of view is the viewpoint or perspective from which the story is told. Click Here
Point of View • Three points of view • The three points of view are first person, third person limited and third person omniscient. Click Here
Point of View • First person point of view • First person point of view is when the narrator (person telling the story) is a character in the story. First person point of view is easily recognized because the narrator will use first person pronouns such as: I, me, my, we, and us. Click Here
Point of View • Third Person Limited • Third person limited point of view is when the person telling the story (narrator) is outside the story but the narrator only tells the story from a single character’s point of view. Click Here
Point of View • Third Person Omniscient • Third person omniscient point of view is when the person telling the story is outside the story but he knows what every character is thinking and what will happen in the end of the story allowing the narrator to give hints (foreshadow) what will happen later in the story. The narrator is god-like or omniscient which means all-knowing. Click Here