ELA EOG Vocab

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Across
  1. 4. the arrangement of and relations between the parts or elements of something complex:
  2. 5. When an object or item is a symbol of a larger idea or concept
  3. 6. a distinguishing quality or characteristic, typically one belonging to a person:
  4. 9. a person who speaks
  5. 10. Summary a brief account of a text’s central or main points, themes, or ideas that is free of bias, prejudice, and personal opinion and does not incorporate outside information
  6. 11. the process of combining alternatives, information, and values to arrive at a decision. It completes the sentence, “I am choosing this alternative because…“
  7. 13. sufficiently great or important to be worthy of attention; noteworthy
  8. 14. a group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem; a verse. This is like a paragraph but in a poem.
  9. 16. the subject or underlying meaning that a literary text directly or indirectly explains, develops, and/or explores
  10. 17. to say, show, and/or act in response to a prompt which may be a question, an action or event, a claim or counterclaim, etc.
Down
  1. 1. pieces of factual information that back up the main idea(s) you are trying to convey. These details clarify the main idea you are describing and bring it into clear focus for those who are reading your writing or listening to what you are saying
  2. 2. refer to the way authors organize information in text. Recognizing the underlying structure of texts can help you focus attention on key concepts and relationships, anticipate what is to come, and monitor your comprehension as you read.
  3. 3. the subject or matter being discussed or written about in a text, speech, etc.
  4. 5. a state or feeling of excited or anxious uncertainty about what may happen
  5. 7. the time and place of the action in a book, play, story, etc.
  6. 8. the attitude an author takes toward the subject or topic of a text, generally revealed through word choice, perspective, or point of view
  7. 12. a particular manner of doing something (e.g., writing, painting, speaking, etc.) characteristic to an individual (e.g., author, singer, etc.), region, time, artistic/literary movement, etc.; in writing, style includes word choice, fluency, voice, sentence structure, figurative language, and syntax
  8. 15. anything you can read, write, view, listen to, or explore, including books, photographs, films, articles, music, art, and more
  9. 17. make (previously unknown or secret information) known to others