A set of statements, each supporting the other, that presents a position or viewpoint. State in which people of different backgrounds live in society together but hold on to their unique traditions and customs When two or more sentence elements of equal rank or importance are expressed in a similar way. Name specific people, places, things or ideas. A position taken on an arguable viewpoint. Use this to connect two closely related independent clauses. When a character struggles between opposing needs or desires or emotions within his or her own mind. Arrangement of words, order of grammatical elements. The way words are put together to make meaningful elements, such as phrases, clauses, and sentences. A struggle or problem in a story that sets the story in motion. The way a writer or speaker uses words or tone to express ideas as well as the writer's PERSONA or PERSONALITY. A reference to a well-known person, event, or place from history, music, art, or another literary work. Uses limited emotion and depicts confidence and expertise; avoids contractions, abbreviations, and slang. When a character struggles against an outside force. Examples of this: nationality, race, religion, family, gender, community, language, politics, sports, music, fashion, food, hobbies Writer’s central idea or main message about life. Set of statements, each supporting the other, that presents a position or viewpoint. Similar to spoken conversation in structure; may use contractions, abbreviations, or slang Culture is not a fixed element. It changes as people grow and change and integrate new customs and people into their individual webs of culture. Uses factual evidence and logical thought to appeal to sense of reason. Appeals to the reader's senses or emotions. A position taken on an arguable viewpoint. Statement articulating the central meaning of the text. Anything (object, animal, event, person, or place) that represents itself but also stands for something else on a figurative level. The arrangement of two or more things for the purpose of comparison. A set of statements, each supporting the other, that presents a position or viewpoint. State in which people of different backgrounds live in society together but hold on to their unique traditions and customs When two or more sentence elements of equal rank or importance are expressed in a similar way. Name specific people, places, things or ideas. A position taken on an arguable viewpoint. Use this to connect two closely related independent clauses. When a character struggles between opposing needs or desires or emotions within his or her own mind. Arrangement of words, order of grammatical elements. The way words are put together to make meaningful elements, such as phrases, clauses, and sentences. A struggle or problem in a story that sets the story in motion. The way a writer or speaker uses words or tone to express ideas as well as the writer's PERSONA or PERSONALITY. A reference to a well-known person, event, or place from history, music, art, or another literary work. Uses limited emotion and depicts confidence and expertise; avoids contractions, abbreviations, and slang. When a character struggles against an outside force. Examples of this: nationality, race, religion, family, gender, community, language, politics, sports, music, fashion, food, hobbies Writer’s central idea or main message about life. Set of statements, each supporting the other, that presents a position or viewpoint. Similar to spoken conversation in structure; may use contractions, abbreviations, or slang Culture is not a fixed element. It changes as people grow and change and integrate new customs and people into their individual webs of culture. Uses factual evidence and logical thought to appeal to sense of reason. Appeals to the reader's senses or emotions. A position taken on an arguable viewpoint. Statement articulating the central meaning of the text. Anything (object, animal, event, person, or place) that represents itself but also stands for something else on a figurative level. The arrangement of two or more things for the purpose of comparison.
(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
A set of statements, each supporting the other, that presents a position or viewpoint.
State in which people of different backgrounds live in society together but hold on to their unique traditions and customs
When two or more sentence elements of equal rank or importance are expressed in a similar way.
Name specific people, places, things or ideas.
A position taken on an arguable viewpoint.
Use this to connect two closely related independent clauses.
When a character struggles between opposing needs or desires or emotions within his or her own mind.
Arrangement of words, order of grammatical elements. The way words are put together to make meaningful elements, such as phrases, clauses, and sentences.
A struggle or problem in a story that sets the story in motion.
The way a writer or speaker uses words or tone to express ideas as well as the writer's PERSONA or PERSONALITY.
A reference to a well-known person, event, or place from history, music, art, or another literary work.
Uses limited emotion and depicts confidence and expertise; avoids contractions, abbreviations, and slang.
When a character struggles against an outside force.
Examples of this: nationality, race, religion, family, gender, community, language, politics, sports, music, fashion, food, hobbies
Writer’s central idea or main message about life.
Set of statements, each supporting the other, that presents a position or viewpoint.
Similar to spoken conversation in structure; may use contractions, abbreviations, or slang
Culture is not a fixed element. It changes as people grow and change and integrate new customs and people into their individual webs of culture.
Uses factual evidence and logical thought to appeal to sense of reason.
Appeals to the reader's senses or emotions.
A position taken on an arguable viewpoint.
Statement articulating the central meaning of the text.
Anything (object, animal, event, person, or place) that represents itself but also stands for something else on a figurative level.
The arrangement of two or more things for the purpose of comparison.