(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.
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the point the author is trying to make
Claim
using something to stand for something else
Symbolism
conflict with a force outside of the character
external conflict
comparing two unlike things using "like or as"
Simile
conflict the character has within him/herself
internal conflict
support for how the claim is true
Evidence
example of this is a character getting rained on during her walk to school
character vs. nature conflict
the beginning of a story where the setting and characters are introduced
Exposition
a character that changes throughout the story
dynamic character
a character that does not change throughout the story
static character
creating a vivid picture in the reader's mind, using the fie senses
Imagery
comparing two unlike things by saying one is the other
Metaphor
using language to mean something different than the literal meaning of the words
figurative language
a series of events leading up to the climax in a story
Rising Action
giving non-human objects human characteristics
Personification
explanation of how the evidence supports the claim
Reasoning
the ending of the story where the conflict is usually solved
Resolution
comparing two things in order to make a point
Analogy
the one telling the story is a part of the story and uses pronouns such as "I," "me," and "my"
first-person point of view
the people, animals, or creatures within a story
characters
example of this would be a character feeling guilty for cheating on a test
character vs. self conflict
the problem in the story
Conflict
a gentler way of saying something that may seem harsh
Euphemism
words that imitate sounds
Onomatopoeia
the way someone sees something
perspective
a figure of speech using a phrase in which the meaning is completely different than what the words say
Idiom
category of literature
genre
the turning point of the story
Climax
the same initial consonant sound in words within a sentence or line
Alliteration
when and where the story takes place
Setting
hints at what's to come
Foreshadowing
example of this would be a character getting into an argument with his brother
character vs. character conflict
reference to something presumably well-known
Allusion
pairing two opposite words next to each other to create an effect
Oxymoron
the series of events leading from the climax to the resolution
Falling Action
three types of third-person point of view
objective, limited, omniscient
Third-person point of view
the narrator is not a part of the story, but is telling the story of others and uses pronouns such as "he," "she," and "they"
uses the pronouns "you" and "your", speaks directly to the reader
second-person point of view