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English 12 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

will give medals and become fan if these questions are answered!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Main Idea Definition: How do you go about finding the main idea of a story? Pun (5.02) Definition: Example: Situational Irony (5.02) Definition: Example: Verbal Irony (5.02) Definition: Example: Dramatic Irony (5.02) Definition: Example: Indicative Mood (5.08) Definition: Example: Imperative Mood (5.08) Definition: Example: Subjunctive Mood (5.08) Definition: Example: Dialogue: Definition: How do you recognize dialogue in a story? Conflict (5.05) Definition: How do you recognize conflict in a story? Setting (5.05) Definition: How do you go about finding this? Rising Action (5.05) Definition: Climax (5.05) Definition: How do you go about finding this? Resolution (5.05) Definition: How do you go about finding this? Synonym Definition: Example:

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@britt5

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Main Idea-- Definition: the most important or central thought of a paragraph or larger section of text, which tells the reader what the text is about. How do you go about finding the main idea of a story? ---(what the writer is saying about the topic)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

do you know any more?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes hung on i am typing them up for ya

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thank you very much

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Pun-the humorous use of a word or phrase so as to emphasize or suggest its different meanings or applications, or the use of words that are alike or nearly alike in sound but different in meaning; a play on words. Example: My dog has a lot of potential; you just have to unleash it. Situational irony-Irony involving a situation in which actions have an effect that is opposite from what was intended, so that the outcome is contrary to what was expected. Example: A fire station burns down

OpenStudy (anonymous):

your welcome i am still going

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thanks

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@britt5 do u have any more

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Verbal Irony --Definition: irony in which a person says or writes one thing and means another, or uses words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of the literal meaning. Example: Soft like a brick Dramatic Irony --Definition: irony that is inherent in speeches or a situation of a drama and is understood by the audience but not grasped by the characters in the play. Example: In a scary movie, the character walks into a house and the audience knows the killer is in the house. Indicative Mood --Definition: a mood (grammatically unmarked) that represents the act or state as an objective fact Example: In “I walked to school,” the verb walked is in the indicative mood. Imperative Mood --Definition: a mood that expresses an intention to influence the listener's behavior Example: “Eat your spinach!” is an imperative sentence. Subjunctive Mood --Definition: a mood that represents an act or state (not as a fact but) as contingent or possible Example: I wish it were summer. Dialogue: Definition: conversation between two or more persons. How do you recognize dialogue in a story? ---All dialogue in a story will have quotations around it. It will be in a separate paragraph from any other dialogue, but it may have descriptions around it most writers include both dialogue and narrative in a paragraph. Conflict (5.05) Definition: to come into collision or disagreement; be contradictory, at variance, or in opposition; clash. How do you recognize conflict in a story? Struggle in a story, whether it be internal (within one character) or external (outside of the character). Setting --Definition: the surroundings or environment of anything. How do you go about finding this? Use clues from the text to find out where the story in taking place. Rising Action --Definition: a related series of incidents in a literary plot that build toward the point of greatest interest. Climax -- Definition: the highest or most intense point in the development or resolution of something; culmination How do you go about finding this? When the conflict of the plot is resolved. Resolution --Definition: the act of finding an answer or solution to a conflict, problem, etc. : the act of resolving something. How do you go about finding this? When the conflict (problem) is fixed. Synonym Definition: a word having the same or nearly the same meaning as another in the language, as Example: happy, joyful they mean the same thing.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

sorry it took so long

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thank you very much!!! @britt5

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Your very welcome!!!! @KevinHelp

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