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Words & Phrases to test your knowledge and prepare for the reading test

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Question
Answer
Purpose   The reason for which something is done, made, or used.  
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Explain   To make plain or clear; to interpret  
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Main Idea   The overall central thought or message of a paragraph or text  
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Compare   To examine (two or more objects, ideas, people, etc) in order to note similarities or differences  
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Describe   To tell in written or spoken words  
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Argument   A statement, reason or fact for or against a point  
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State   To make known; to express  
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Author's point of View   The author's attitude or opinion about the subject; the viewpoint from which something is written.  
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Author's Purpose   What the author is trying to accomplish through the writing.  
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Cause   The reason, or motive, for an action; why something happens.  
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Context   The parts of a written or spoken statement that comes before or follow a specific word or passage, usually influencing its meaning.  
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Contrast   To compare in order to show differences  
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Characterize   To describe the individual quality of  
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Contrast   To show differences when two or more things are compared.  
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Passage   A portion or section of a written work  
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Theme   Central Idea of the story, article, etc. The statement about life or human nature a particular work is trying to convey to the reader.  
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Suggest   To mention for consideration  
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Conclusion   A result or outcome; final decision  
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Emotional Words   Uses words that appeal to a person's emotions rather than to his/her ability to reason. (Sometimes these words are so general that they are meaningless.)  
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Diagram   A drawing that shows how an item is made or how it works.  
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Difference   The way in which two or more things are not the same.  
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Effect   The result, or consequence, of an action.  
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Fact   A statement that can be proven or tested to be true or false.  
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Graph   An illustration of quantity or amount and how it relates to another variable (examples: bar graph, circle graphs, line graphs).  
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Inference   A combination of one's own knowledge and information supplied in the text which leads to a conclusion or generalization about a subject.  
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Main Idea   The most important point that the writer makes in a reading selection; it can be stated or implied.  
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Map   A small-scale representation of an actual piece.  
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Most Accurate   Most correct based on the information provided.  
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Opposing Point of Views   Opposite ideas or opinions on the same topic.  
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Outcome   The result of something; the way something turns out; the effect.  
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Primary Sources   An informational test passage or graphic representation such as in map, chart, photo, graph, illustration, advertisement, statistical table, letter, autobiography, works of literature, historical document, interview, or first hand source of information  
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Relevant/Supporting Details   The small pieces of information that support, develop, or explain the main idea.  
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Similarity   The way in which two or more things are the same.  
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Support   To confirm a statement or opinion  
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Statistics   Facts or data or a numerical kind which represent significant information about a given subject.  
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True   Not false; real; that which is so.  
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Alliteration   The repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words (example: Betty, the bug, bit Bob, the boy.)  
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Central Problem   The primary struggle, or conflict, faced by the main character in the plot of a literary work  
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Character   A person or animal who takes part in the action of a literary work; also the qualities and traits that define an individual's personality.  
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Character Development   The ways in which a character changes, or grows, throughout the course of literary work (a dynamic character changes; a static character does not change)  
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Conflict   The "problem" in a story which triggers the action; struggle between two opposing forces.  
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Dialogue   Conversation between characters in a story, work of nonfiction, novel, or play.  
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Fiction   Writing that comes from a writer's imagination; it is not factual but may be based on facts, real experiences, or people the writer has known.  
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Imagery   Words and phrases that appeal to the reader's senses, help readers to imagine and paint a picture in the reader’s mind  
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Literary Form   A term used to specify the distinct types or categories into which literary works are grouped; also known as genre (examples include fiction, drama, nonfiction, poetry, short stories, and novels).  
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Major Events   The most important incidents that occur in a work of literature; the events that cause the greatest impact on the characters of a literary work.  
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Metaphor   A comparison of two unlike things in which no words of comparison are used (example: That test was a bear!)  
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Mood   The feeling the author wants to convey to the reader through a work of literature, such as excitement, anger, sadness, happiness, or pity.  
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Nonfiction   Prose writing about real people, places, things, and ideas.  
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Personification   A figure of speech in which human qualities are attributed to an object, animal, or idea.  
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Plot   The sequence of events in a work of literature; the action in a story.  
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Repetition   The repeating of sounds, letters, words, or lines, which helps give poetry and writing its meaning, form, and sound.  
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Resolution   The final part of a plot; the events in the story that work out the problem or the conflict.  
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Rhyme   The similarities or likeness of sound existing between two or more words.  
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Rhythm   The pattern of accented and unaccented syllables in poetry; it brings out the musical quality of language and can create a particular mood.  
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Viewpoint   An opinion, attitude or belief about something  
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Setting   The time, place and conditions under which a story takes place.  
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Simile   A comparison of two unlike things using the words like or as (example: When he's mad, Mr. Carter's eyes are like charging bulls.)  
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Assume   To take for granted; or without proof  
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Tone   The author's attitude toward his/her subject. A particular style or manner, as in writing or speech  
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Illustrate   To clarify one's words with examples  
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Assert   To state strongly or positively; affirm  
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Assumption   Something taken for granted  
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Cite   To quote; to refer to as an example  
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Dispute   To engage in an argument or debate  
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Imply   To indicate or suggest without being explicitly stated  
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Infer   To figure out by reasoning; conclude based on evidence presented  
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Contradict   To state the opposite of  
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