Reading SOL Review
Across
- 3. point of view where the narrator only knows what one character is thinking or feeling (page 2)
- 7. repeated use of sounds, words, or ideas for emphasis (page 3)
- 8. explains how one events leads to another (page 4)
- 9. mentions the main idea of a section, helpful when skimming for information (page 4)
- 11. the part of the story where the conflict is solved, happily or unhappily (page 2)
- 12. describes the steps or directions (page 4)
- 15. the use of clues to hint at what's coming next in the story (page 2)
- 19. a phrase formed by contradictory words (page 3)
- 20. repetition of beginning sounds (page 3)
- 24. song-like poem with rhyme, rhythm, and refrain (page 3)
- 25. the events that lead to the resolution (page 2)
- 27. a pair of rhyming lines (page 3)
- 28. graphic organizer used to show the sequence of events (page 4)
- 29. poem with five lines, AABBA rhyme scheme (page 3)
- 32. feeling and emotion associated with a word (page 3)
- 34. the writer's attitude towards the subject (page 3)
- 38. figure of speech that is an extreme exaggeration (page 3)
- 39. point of view where the narrator sees all, hears all, and knows all (page 2)
- 42. a stanza that has four lines (page 3)
- 43. imaginative writing (page 2)
- 44. time, place, and duration (page 2)
- 45. type of irony where the opposite happens of what is expected
- 46. lists items, facts, reasons, or examples (also called listing) (page 4)
- 48. character who stays the same throughout the story (page 2)
Down
- 1. the use of words whose sound suggests it meaning (page 3)
- 2. often mentions the main idea of the article (page 4)
- 4. type of irony where a character says the opposite of what they really mean
- 5. a figure of speech that makes a comparison without using like or as (page 3)
- 6. explains a concept, situation, or idea by giving examples and an overall description (page 4)
- 10. relates events in the order that they happen (page 4)
- 13. a concrete object that represents a larger idea or feeling (page 3)
- 14. figure of speech that uses the words "like" or "as" between a comparison of two unlike things (page 3)
- 16. writing based on truth (page 2)
- 17. the incident that introduces the main conflict or starts the story (page 2)
- 18. the text explains a problem and how it can be fixed (page 4)
- 20. words with opposite meanings (page 1)
- 21. type of irony where the audience knows something the characters do not
- 22. character who changes during the course of the story (page 2)
- 23. the most intense moment in the story where the problem comes to a head (page 2)
- 26. point of view narrated by someone within the story (page 2)
- 27. repetition of final consonant sounds (page 3)
- 30. __________/definition is when the writer defines his or her personal understanding of a topic (page 4)
- 31. language that appeals to the five senses (page 3)
- 33. repetition of vowel sounds (page 3)
- 35. the emotional atmosphere of the story (page 3)
- 36. the events that occur and complicate the problem (page 2)
- 37. poetry with no regular rhyme scheme or meter (page 3)
- 40. the author's message (page 2)
- 41. what the story or passage is mostly about (page 2)
- 45. words that have the same meaning (page 1)
- 47. a poem that has a 5-7-5 syllable pattern, usually about nature (page 3)