Ouiziet 'j reek / lotin roots 3th dms I 4,4

t

nrd

bio ehron ercd

term diet

line r ors t. het ic‘ -c

.kin ; peak, tell

due, duet

ad

fer

uiv

lid

r t

form

Nape

nco

arth write (hove

3rcss

I

hydra

;cater

jcct

r h row

jud

ji 'Lige

logy

s tidy

meter, rnetr

measure

micro

s mail

path

rifler

phobia phon

sound

photo

light

port

carry

psych

spirt, soul

rupt

break

scope

see

scrib, script

white

spect

see, look at

tele

far

tract

pull

yid, s

CC

•ersitasi.e

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.rang Ti to.i.o\ !lething

, dn4

'Nat

ro put or place

Preposition

:h.ows a relationship .4 position between the object of the preposition and the work it modifies

Prepositional Phrase

lased to describe (modify) another works in a Sentence ju.st as an adjective or adverb is used

Primary

an original document or source that comes ti reedy from the event

Propaganda

persuasive techniques that deliberatly iiscourage people from thinking tar

-

a play or multiple meanings of a word or on two words that sound alike but have different meanings

Quote (cited in paper)

an exact line copied from another piece of writing or something someone said

Reg, Ord, land. Domin

controlling or ruling

Restatement or Definition

a type of context clue that uses the meaning of the vocabulary word is in the sentence itself, usually following the vocabulary word

Secondary source

a document that describes a person. place, or ornt, front a second-hand account

Sen. Sent

to feel

short Story

a fictional narrative Nviitten in prose that can be read in one sitting

Similc Si

a comparison between two unlike things IS in g "like" or "as"

Simple Sentence

a group of words that expresses one complete thought that contains a subject and a verb

and names sense Situational Irony . Static Character

when events occur that arc different from what we expected to happen

a character who stays basically the same throughout a story

Stereotype

a fixed idea about the members of a particular group that does not allow for an individuality

Subject

what or whom the sentence is about, answers what or who

Subject Pronoun

pronouns used as the subject or the linking verb complement - I, yon, she, he, we, they

Subjective Writing

writing in which the feelings and opinions of the writer arc revealed

'4tspensc

the , uicertainty or anxiety that a trader feels about what will happen next in a :3toia-

0.102.

t Ma ,/

it has Mt:J(1111g in irSiit hut ffiat ands for ioniedung tic as woil

Synonym/Antonym

of context clue that uses a nonNm or antonym in the same ; , mtence as the word so the reader nu y tndcrstand the meaning of a word

Fable

a set of data a 'ranged in rows and columns

tone

the attitude a writer or narrator takes

toward the characters and events of a litcrarywork or the work's audience Tragedy

play, novel, or other narrative in which the main character come to an unhappy end

Verb

a word that is usually one of the main harts of a sentence and that expresses an action, an oectuaence, or a state of being

verbal Irony

a contrast between what is said and

thcruschrs lain or Word Play

-:ie:4L-a,a ra von. •1

'o hang

,Net. Pon

Source

iNinbolism

!s rote

i hat is really meant

Viv

life

Voc

to call

Word Origins

a word's derivation or etymology, it tells how the word or its parts entered the English language

Word Structure

a type of context clue that uses knowledge of mots, prefixes, and suffixes to figure out what a word might mean



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v

NI'

,

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ti

1,)! in

;

ico. I lung, or Idea \

that expresses action or a state of heinq

pronoun - antecedent

the antecedent is the word the pronoun replaces

pronoun - subject

I lE is an excellent goalie.

pronoun - object

Object pronouns are used everywhere else (direct object, indirect object, object of the preposition). Object pronouns are me, you, him, her, it, us, and them. Examples: Jean talked to him. Are you talking to me?

adjective



describes a noun or pronoun

idverb

describes a verb

preposition

word used to show the relationship of a noun or pronoun to some other word in the sentence. Examples: in, under, near, behind, to, from, over

conjunction

something that joins or connects.

interjection

expresses emotion and has no grammatical relation to the rest of the sentence

standard English

the common American language, words, and grammatical forms that are used and expected in school, business and other sites.

sentence fragment

a sentence missing a subject or verb or complete

thought run-on sentence

two or more complete sentences run together as one

phrase

A group of words with a meaning; an expression

clause

a group of words with a subject and a verb

independent clause

expresses a complete thought and can stand by

itself as a sentence dependent clause

does not express a complete thought and cannot

stand alone as a sentence simple sentence

a sentence consisting of one independent clause Ind no dependent clause

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i): I.

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'X t.' 'V

!1

1111 ■ 1

,01e.c.tinti topic, , i,ithering inforrnition, i)rainstorrning,

rough draft

the first copy or 1 piece of writing

proofreading

checking a document for errors

revision

something that has been written again

faulty tense

..incorrect tense

salutation

word of greeting used to begin a letter

closing

the act of closing something

return address

the address of the person sending the letter

inside address

the part of a business letter that contains the address of the receiver.

jargon

the specialized language or vocabulary of a particular group or profession

subjective

influenced by personal opinion, biased

objective

not influenced by personal opinion, just the facts

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