Literary Elements Flashcards
Phonological awareness skills include a number of important components, such as:
Word awareness: Word awareness refers to the ability to identify words within phrases and sentences. As a skill, word awareness deals more with the meanings of different words rather than the sounds associated with each word.
Onset and rhyme: Onset and rhyme represent a specific skillset that develops from the awareness of similar sounds, or phonemes, contained in words. Children who have developed the onset and rhyming skillset have the ability to recognize words that rhyme.
Syllable awareness: Syllable awareness is the ability to break down words into their constituent sounds, or phonemes. When children have this ability, they can either count or tap to the number of different sounds in a word. For instance, the word education can be broken down into four syllables: ed-u-ca-tion. Children can count the distinct sounds associated with this word.
Rhyme manipulation: Rhyme manipulation is closely related to onset and rhyme. Children with rhyme manipulation skills have the ability to both recognize and produce rhyming sounds and words, such as pool, stool, cool, and fool.
Phonemic awareness: Phonemic awareness refers to a child’s ability to identify the different sounds forming a word. Children with phonemic awareness can put different sounds together to form new words.
Phonological awareness Skills:
Foundation of Language are needed in order to write, read, spell, and communicate
Phonological Awareness Skills
Phonological Awareness provide people with the ability to pick out……
Sounds.
Verse
formal, structured style of writing that uses a set rhythm, or meter, and often includes line breaks and rhyme.Verse lines are usually shorter than prose lines, and the lines are often grouped into stanzas.There are three types of verse: rhymed, blank, and free.Rhymed verse is the most common type, and it usually has a metrical form that rhymes throughout.Blank verse has a metrical form but no rhyme, while free verse has no set meter but may or may not be rhymed.
Prose
A straightforward, conversational style of writing that follows the natural flow of language and doesn’t use line breaks.Prose is made up of sentences and paragraphs, and is similar to “normal language”.Examples of prose include the opening lines of 1984 by George Orwell and fairy tales.
Inferential Comprehension
.It’s a higher order thinking skill that requires the reader or viewer to use clues and their prior knowledge to make inferences.
Reading comprehension has multiple levels, includingliteral, inferential, and evaluative:
Name the Four Levels of Reading Comprehension
literary device that gives readers hints about what will happen later in a story
Objective: Add suspense to a story.Create tension and build anticipation for future events in the narrative. This literary technique is key to manipulating reader emotions, building suspense, and setting the stage for conflict and climax in the story.
Foreshadowing
is a saying that concisely expresses a moral principle or an observation about the world, presenting it as a general or universal truth.
Aphorism
Rhetorical techniques are the specific methods of rhetoric that are used to appeal to a particular audience. They are a way of persuasion in which a speaker tries to make an idea or position more appealing than it otherwise would be. Rhetorical techniques
Retorecical Techniques that appeal to emotion as opposed to logic or reasoning.
1.Repetition,
2.exaggeration,
3. euphemistic language,
4. bandwagon appeals, and
5. Testimonial appeals are the main rhetorical devices. They are often used to persuade audiences.
Rhetorical Technique Styles
Persuasion is the process by which a person attempts to change the opinions or attitudes of another person by transmitting the information.
Define Persuasion
Ethos persuasion technique
attempt to persuade by appealing to the reader’s moral values.
Pathos Retorical Technique
a rhetorical device that involves appealing to an audience’s emotions to persuade them to feel and agree with the author’s claim.
a rhetorical device that appeals to an audience’s sense of reason or logic. It’s often used to build legitimacy and logical arguments, and can be thought of as the text of an argument or how well a writer has argued their point.
Logos Persuasive Techniques