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        | a group of words that begin with the same sound |  | 
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        | the author's reason for writing - persuade, inform, entertain |  | 
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        | a judgement based on personal past experience |  | 
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        | the story of a person's life written by another person |  | 
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        | the moment in a story where everything changes |  | 
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        | telling how things are alike |  | 
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        | conversation between people in a story |  | 
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        | a newspaper or magazine article that gives opinions of the editors |  | 
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        | a statement that stretches the truth |  | 
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        | first person point of view |  | Definition 
 
        | point of view where the main character tells the story to share his/her own thoughts and feelings;  uses the words I, me, my |  | 
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        | a statement that tells what a bunch of things have in common |  | 
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        | using details in the text and information in the reader's head to figure something out that the author didn't come straight out and say |  | 
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        | nonfiction text, a text written to share factual information |  | 
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        | ways an author or poets use words to help a reader visualize; similes, metaphors, etc. |  | 
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        | the author's most important point; using these two questions helps to narrow it down (Who or what is it about?  What about that?) |  | 
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        | comparing two things without using "like" or "as" |  | 
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        | a word that can have many meanings |  | 
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        | informational text; a text that tells facts |  | 
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        | giving human feelings and actions to something that is not human |  | 
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        | a set of events that includes the exposition, conflict, rising exposition, climax, falling action, and resolution |  | 
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        | from whose view the story is told |  | 
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        | a group of letters at the beginning of a word to change its meaning |  | 
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        | the part of the story that comes after the climax, when the climax is resolved |  | 
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        | the part of the story after the conflict is introduced, but before the climax |  | 
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        | comparing two things by using "like" or "as" |  | 
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        | a group of letters that is placed at the end of the word that changes its meaning |  | 
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        | retelling the most important parts of a text in one's own words |  | 
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        | one word that has the same meaning as another word |  | 
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        | a major idea the author wants the reader to understand about life |  | 
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        | someone's own feeling or beliefs |  | 
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        | a group of lines in a poem; like a paragraph in a poem |  | 
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        | the person who is telling the poem |  | 
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        | how the author organized his/her writing: sequence, problem-solution, cause-effect |  | 
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        | a text written in order or a list, using signal words like first, second, next, after, finally, or dates |  | 
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        | compare/contrast text structure |  | Definition 
 
        | the author describes how things are the same and different; signal words include on the other hand, but, in contrast, similar, etc. |  | 
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        | a life story written by the person it is told about |  | 
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        | short stories with characters such as fairies, elves, and spirits |  | 
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        | stories that teach a moral |  | 
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