1.
Why the author wrote the story
2.
Different types of drama between characters and different aspects of the story (Ex: Man v Man, Man v Nature, Man v Supernatural, Man v Self)
3.
A character that has little to no inner change in the story
4.
A character that has an important inner change throughout the story
5.
When someone in the story is telling the story and uses words like I, me, and my
6.
Usually used in a "how-to" story and uses words like you
7.
When there is a a narrator outside of the story telling the story and uses words like he, she, them
8.
When the drama or central conflict is picking up in the story
9.
When the drama or central conflict in a story is calming down
10.
The perspective the story is written in
12.
The introduction or beginning of the story that introduces characters and setting
13.
The ending of a story or resolve
14.
The character who opposes the main character
16.
Where a story takes place
17.
The peak central drama or action in a story
18.
The point of the story or main idea
19.
What happens in the story or the summary
20.
When you change details of a story to fit another way to tell it
21.
The point of the story or main idea
23.
Any character in the story that is not the main character
24.
The reader, watcher or listener of a story
25.
prejudice in favor of or against one thing, person, or group; typically considered unfair