Analog - Neshaminy School District



READINGsynonymswords that mean the sameantonymswords that mean the oppositeprefixesword parts at the BEGINNING of wordssuffixesword parts at the ENDS of wordsmain ideawhat the passage is MOSTLY aboutauthor's purposeThis is WHY the author wrote the article, story, passage, etc.characterA person, animal, or thing in the passage.narratorThe person telling the storysubject of a biographyThe person that the biography is abouteventsomething that HAPPENS in a storysolutionhow the problem is solved in the storyfactstruthsopinionssomeone's beliefstext organizationhow the author organized his/her writingsequenceThe order that things happenClue words:first, second, next, after, finallycompare/contrastClue words:on the other hand, but, in contrast, like, similar, differencequestion/answerClue words:who, what, when, where, whycause/effectClue words:because of, since, as a resultproblem/solutionClue words:problem, solution, effect, hopefulheadingsThese are BOLD words and phrases at the TOP of passagessummarya shortened version of a passagebiographyA life story written about a person by ANOTHER personun- and -dis mean....the opposite ofin- and non- mean.....notpre- means....before-ful meansfull of-ly means....in that wayentertainAn author might write to make you laugh, to enjoy yourself, to have a good time reading, to make you feel strong emotions....persuadeAn author might write to try to change your mind, convince of something....informAn author might write to try and tell you about something, explain directions....PersonificationSomething not human acting like a humanEx. The breeze whistled through the trees.AlliterationBeginning sound being repeated 2 or more timesEx. Peter Piper picked a peck of peppers.SimileUses the words "like" or "as" to compare objects or ideasEx. Busy as a bee.MetaphorStates a fact or draws a verbal picture by the use of a comparison. A simile says you are like something; a metaphor says you are something.Ex. You are what you eat.OnomatopoeiaWords that sound like they meanEx. Snap, crackle, popHyperboleAn exaggeration so dramatic that no one would believe the statement was true.Ex. He was so hungry he ate a bear.FictionStory that is not real or is pretendNon-fictionTrue or factualMATHanalogtime shown on a clock or watch with hour and minute hands (not digital)cubea rectangular solid with 6 congruent square facesfacea flat surface (or plane) that is one side of a solid figurehexagona 6-sided figurelinea straight path extending in both directions with no endpointsline of symmetrya line that divides a figure into two halves that are mirror images of each otherline segmentpart of a line with two endpointsnumber sentencea math equation with numbersoctagonan 8-sided shapeordered paira pair of numbers used to locate a point on a gridparallel lineslines that never intersect and are always the same distance apartpentagona 5-sided shapeperpendicular linestwo lines that intersect to form right anglespictographa graph that uses pictures to show and compare informationpyramida solid figure with a polygon base and triangular sides that meet at a single pointspherea solid figure that is also called a balltally charta table that uses tally marks to record dataaddenda number that is being addedarraya rectangular arrangement of objects in equal rows or columnsconea solid figure that has a circular base and one vertexcylindera solid figure with 2 circular bases that are parallel and congruentedgethe line segment where 2 faces of a solid figure meetequivalenthaving the same valuefact familya set of related addition/subtraction or multiplication/division equations that use the same numbersinequalitya math sentence that contains a symbol showing that the terms on either side are unequalperimeterthe distance around a figurequadrilaterala polygon with 4 sidesvolumethe amount of space that a solid figure can holdtransformationmoving a figure to a new position by slide (translation), flip (reflection), or turn (rotation)whole numberany of the counting numberstranslationmoving a figure without turning or flipping it (slide)rotationmoving a figure by turning it around a fixed point (turn)congruentfigures with the same size and shapebar grapha way to display data using bars ................
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