| understatement | | make writing vivid and believable |
| connotation | | Reference to another literary, artistic, or musical work |
| inductive reasoning | | autobiographical writing that focuses on a specific part of someone's life |
| Allusion | | could be to explain, inform, entertain, persuade, or enlighten |
| narrative nonfiction | | brief story told to make a point or entertain |
| rhetorical question | | story of a person's life written by another person |
| bias | | claim, statement, ot declaration that the writer supports |
| Anecdote | | dictionary definition of a word |
| details | | specialized or technical vocabulary of a specific group |
| denotation | | factual and informative writing |
| assertion | | thinking that proceeds from the general to the specific |
| biography | | opening paragraph of a news story |
| irony | | story of a person's life written by the person |
| Analogy | | comparison of something unfamiliar with something better known |
| authors purpose | | kind of persuasive writing published in a periodical or online |
| lead | | humorous or sarcastic way of saying the opposite of what is meant |
| news story | | central idea or what the author wants you to remember most |
| personal essay | | literary device used to make fun of human weaknesses or vices |
| satire | | tells a true story |
| expository nonfiction | | emotional feelings surrounding a word |
| Memoir | | when writers say less than is complete or true |
| autobiography | | tell you about events that are occuring in the world |
| deductive reasoning | | a question asked for an effect - no answer is expected |
| editorial | | thinking that goes from the specific to the general |
| jargon | | informal and may deal with any subject |
| main idea | | mental leaning, prejudice, or inclination |