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Improve your understanding of essential English terms for successful performance on the STAAR EOC Reading test. Learn about characteristics, conveying messages, dialogue, citing evidence, narrative writing, melodrama, persuasive techniques, metaphors, and more.
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English Vocabulary for EOC Released Questions Created by: Stephanie Sutherland English I Instructor Caddo Mills High School
English Terms • These terms are likely to show up on the English I Reading portion of the STAAR EOC.
Characteristic • A feature or quality belonging typically to a person, place, or thing and serving to identify it. • Characteristics may be physical or may describe the object's nature • Generosity is his chief characteristic.
Convey • To make an idea known or understandable to someone • On the EOC, you will see questions that ask: “What message does the author convey in the passage?” “How does the author convey to the reader that. . . .” • This is shown by. . . • You are able to understand this by. . .
Dialogue • Conversation between characters in a literary work. Dialogue can contribute to characterization, create mood, advance the plot, and develop theme.
Evidence • Support for a claim or argument. Evidence comes from the original text in order to prove or back up the statement. • On the EOC, you will see questions that ask you to, “Explain your answer and support it with evidence from the selection.” • This is supported by: . . . • For example, . . . • “_________” is evidence that . . .
Cited • To quote (a passage, book, or author) as evidence for or justification of an argument or statement, especially in a scholarly work • When using text evidence, you are citing the passage.
Narrative • Writing or speech that tells a story. • The story is told by a narrator and can take the form of a novel, an essay, a poem, or a short story.
Melodrama (Melodramatic) • Exaggerated, sensationalized, or overemotional texts. • Often appeal to emotions or express dramatic emotions. • The man and woman are both being melodramatic.
Persuasive • A type of speech or writing, usually nonfiction, that attempts to convince an audience to think or act in a particular way.
Metaphor • A figure of speech that compares or equates two seemingly unlike things. In contrast to a simile, a metaphor implies the comparison instead of stating it directly. • There is no use of connectives such as “like” or “as.” • The simplest form of metaphor is: "The [first thing] is a [second thing]." • Life is a winding road.
Excerpt • An excerpt is a passage or segment taken from a text. The length of an excerpt may be a phrase, a sentence, a paragraph, or an entire chapter. • Below is a short excerpt from the preamble.
Plot • The sequence of events in a story, play, or narrative poem. • Revolves around a central conflict, faced by the main characters.
Point of View • The standpoint, or perspective, from which a story is told. • All stories are told by a narrator, and who that narrator is affects the point of view. • First-Person: The narrator is a character in the story and refers to as “I.” • Third-Person: The narrator is someone who stands outside the story and refers to characters as “he” or she.”
Protagonist/Antagonist • Protagonist – The central character in a narrative literary work, around whom the main conflict revolves. • Generally, the reader or audience is meant to sympathize with the protagonist who usually changes after the climax of the story. • Antagonist – A person or force in society or nature that opposes the protagonist. • Generally, the reader is meant NOT to sympathize with the antagonist
Simile • A figure of speech that uses “like” or “as” to compare two seemingly unlike things. Smart as an owl. Quiet like a mouse. Cool as a cucumber. Solid as a rock. Swim like a fish.
Symbolic Imagery • Any object, person, place, or experience that exists on a literal level but is also intended to symbolize something else, usually something abstract. • In O. Henry’s story “The Gift of the Magi,” Della’s hair is the symbol of her beauty.
Character Foil • When a character is portrayed as opposite of another character in a particular way. • By putting the two characters next to each other, the different characteristic is emphasized. • In • In Shrek, the donkey and Shrek are two very different types of characters.
Tone • An author’s attitude toward his or her subject matter. • Tone is conveyed through elements of style, including word choice. • A writer’s tone may convey a variety of attitudes, such as sympathy or humor. • Margaret Atwood employs an ironic tone in “Waiting.”
Achieve • Verb • To get or attain by effort • To gain • To obtain • If you study and practice, you will achieve success on your EOC.
Containing • Verb • To restrain or keep within limits • To hold or have within • A jar containing cookies sits on my grandmother’s counter.
Amid • Preposition • In or into the middle of • Synonyms: surrounded by, through, between • Antonyms: from, out of • It was hard to hear amid all the cheering.
Cautionary • Adjective • Warning or admonishment • Synonyms: warning, advisory, counseling • “Little Red Riding Hood” is a cautionary tale reminding children to listen to their parents.
Emphasize (Emphasis) • Verb • To place stress on or to show as important • Synonyms: accent, illuminate, feature, press • Antonyms: play down, de-emphasize • The teacher emphasized the importance of doing well on the EOC.
Conflicting Opinions • Noun • Two or more points of view in opposition to one another. • If one conflicting opinion is true, the other can note be true. • The students had conflicting opinions about whether chocolate is the best flavor of ice cream.
Eager • Adjective • Marked by enthusiastic desire or interest; impatient excitement • Synonyms: excited, impatient, antsy • Antonyms: hesitant, reluctant, unenthusiastic • He was eager for Friday to come.
Displaying • Verb • To make evident or to show • Synonyms: expose, produce, lay out • Antonyms: hide, cover, conceal, camouflage • The characters were displaying a number of emotions.
Enhance • Verb • To increase or improve in value, quality, or attractiveness • Synonyms: improve, help, upgrade • Antonym: worsen • The image enhanced the students’ understanding of the passage.
Ideal • Adjective • Being characteristically without flaw, usually only existing in theory or imagination. • Synonyms: visionary, perfected, unsurpassed • Antonyms: faulty, defective • It was an ideal spot for vacation.
Evoke • Verb • to bring to mind or recollection • Synonym: elicit, raise • His photographs evoke the isolation and solitude of the desert.
Imply • Verb • To express, suggest, or show something without stating it directly • Synonyms: conclude, deduce, reason, gather • My dad’s gruff manner implied he was in a foul mood.
Phony • Adjective • Not genuine, intended to deceive or mislead. • Synonyms: false, counterfeit, bogus • Antonyms: authentic, genuine, real • He tried to pay with phony money.
Optimistic • Adjective • Characterized by an inclination to expect the best possible outcome • Synonyms: idealistic, hopeful • Antonyms: despairing, hopeless, pessimistic • An optimistic person would say this glass is half full.
Intended • Adjective • Expected to be such in the future • Synonyms: deliberate, intentional, purposeful • Antonym: unintentional • Stephenie Meyer intended for teens to read her books.
Obtaining • Verb • to gain or attain usually by planned action or effort • Synonyms: acquire, come by, get • The information may be challenging to obtain.
Pessimistic • Adjective • Characterized by an inclination to expect the worst possible outcome • Synonyms: defeatist, downbeat, hopeless • Antonyms: hopeful, optimistic, upbeat • A pessimistic person would say this glass is half empty.
Indicate • Verb • To point something out or to present evidence • Synonyms: denote, point to, tell of • The map indicates where the treasure is buried.
Primarily • Adverb • For the most part, in the first place. • Synonyms: firstly, initially, originally, mainly • Ketchup is primarily made from tomatoes.
Rational • Adjective • Having reason or understanding • Synonyms: reasonable, reasoning, thinking • Antonyms: irrational, unreasonable • There was a rational reason for the creaking sound in the house. The dog was walking up the squeaky stairs.
Reveal • Verb • To make something (secret or hidden) publically or generally known. • Synonyms: disclose, uncover, tell, expose • Antonyms: cover up, hide, conceal • The expression on her face revealed how she felt.
Upheaval • Noun • Extreme agitation or disorder, radical change • Synonyms: convulsion, uproar, uproot • The civil rights movement marked a period of social upheaval in the U.S.
Suggests • Verb • To mention or imply as a possibility, to call to mind by thought or association • Synonyms: hint, insinuate, indicate • Your teacher suggests you study for the EOC.
Assumption • Noun • A belief or statement taken for granted without actual proof • Synonyms: hypothesis, assuming, belief • Antonyms: doubt, unexpected • We made an assumption that the candy was for us; actually, it was for a party for the teachers.
Tendency • Noun • A proneness to a particular kind of thought or action • Synonym: trend • Grace has a tendency to drop things.
Various • Adjective • Of differing kinds, having a number of different aspects or characteristics • Synonyms: varied, different • Antonyms: one of a kind, unique, singular • He has lived in places as various as New York City and Caddo Mills.
Sources Used Wilhelm, Jeffrey D. Literature Texas Treasures Course 4. Columbus ,OH: McGraw Hill/Glencoe, 2011.Print. Dictionary and Thesaurus - Merriam- Webster Online. Web. 07 Feb. 2012. <http://www.merriam-webster.com/>.