Across
- 6. Show action or doing. All sentences must have at least one. Linking verbs express that someone or something exists or is a certain way. Be, am, is, are, was, were, been, being are linking verbs.
- 8. Words whose sound suggests its meaning. The bees buzzed by flying back to their hive.
- 9. Giving human qualities to things and ideas. The car jumped to the finish line.
- 10. Describe only nouns. They tell what kind? Or how many? Noun markers a, an, the are always adjectives. These words pile up in front of nouns. Words ending in –able, -ful, -ible, -ical,-ious, -ive, --y usually form adjectives.
- 12. A comparison using “like” or “as.” My backpack was like a bag of bricks.
- 13. These words that take the place of nouns to keep from repeating the nouns over and over. I , he, she, it, they, them, us, her, them, this, that, who, which, what. One of the possessive pronouns work like adjective -my, mine, his, hers, our, ours, etc
- 15. Most of these words indicate time, place or position. Most common prepositions are at, to , with from, for, of, on, in, into, onto
- 16. A phrase that has a meaning different from the dictionary definition. Don’t take the fall for your friend.
Down
- 1. An extravagant exaggeration. I ate five-thousand pancakes for breakfast!
- 2. References to people, an event from literature, sports, history, movies or the arts.He’s no Michael Jordan
- 3. These words are hook words, phrases, or sentences. Most common conjunctions are because when, while, as, since, although, whenever.
- 4. These words express emotion or are “fillers” in sentences, but which serve little other function.
- 5. Repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of words. Samantha saw seven silly soldiers selling strawberries Saturday.
- 7. Person, place, thing, feelings, or ideas. A, an, the usually go before a nounWord endings with suffixes -ance, -ancy,-ence,-ice,-ion,-ity,-ment,- -ness and –ure are usually nouns.
- 11. The words describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. They answer the questions: how, when, where, why and under what conditions. Words that are always adverbs are: not, very, often, here, almost, always, never, there, and too. Often end with –ly.
- 14. A figure of speech stating two things are similar. The test was a long never-ending marathon