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Opposite words viewpoint
Quiz by Ana Maria Garcia Guillén
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Opposite words
Opposite Words Set 1
Opposite Words Quiz Set 1
Chinese opposite words
Learn some useful opposite words
## Fill in the Blank Fill in the blank with the correct words: 1. Work is the use of _____________ to move an object. _____________ 2. Only the part of the applied force that acts in the same _____________ as motion does work. _____________ 3. Work transfers _____________ from one form to another. _____________ 4. The unit of work is the _____________ (J). _____________ 5. The formula for work is _____________ . _____________ [Word Bank]: force, direction, energy, joule, $W = F \times d$ ## Multiple Choice Questions Choose the correct answer from the choices for each question: 1. Which statement best describes when work is done on an object? * A. A force acts on the object while it moves in the same direction as the force. * B. A force acts on the object while it does not move. * C. The object moves but no force is applied. * D. A force acts opposite to the motion and the object does not move. 2. If a force of 10 N moves an object 3 m in the same direction as the force, how much work is done? * A. 3 J * B. 10 J * C. 30 J * D. 13 J 3. Which unit correctly measures work? * A. Newton (N) * B. Meter (m) * C. Joule (J) * D. Watt (W) 4. If a force acts perpendicular to the motion of an object, how much work does that component do? * A. Maximum work * B. Zero work * C. Negative work * D. Equal to force times distance 5. Using the example from the passage, the work done lifting a 30 N dog 2 m is: * A. 15 J * B. 60 J * C. 32 J * D. 90 J ## Open-Ended Questions Answer the following questions in complete sentences: 1. Explain in your own words why only the component of force in the direction of motion does work. 2. A student pushes a box with a 25 N horizontal force and the box moves 4 m horizontally. Calculate the work done and show your steps using the formula from the passage. 3. Describe one real-life example (not in the passage) where work transfers energy from one form to another. Identify the force, the distance, and the energy transfer.
food and drinks, clothes, places in town, the days of the week, pronouns, opposite adjectives and wh words for A1CEFR
Sure! Here's a solid list of **AP English Literature vocabulary**âterms that often come up in class, essays, and the AP exam. I'll break it down into categories to make it easier to study. --- ### đ **Literary Devices & Techniques** 1. **Alliteration** â Repetition of initial consonant sounds 2. **Allusion** â A reference to another text, event, or figure 3. **Anaphora** â Repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses 4. **Antithesis** â Contrast of ideas in a balanced or parallel construction 5. **Apostrophe** â Addressing someone absent, dead, or nonhuman as if present and able to respond 6. **Assonance** â Repetition of vowel sounds within nearby words 7. **Asyndeton** â Omission of conjunctions between parts of a sentence 8. **Consonance** â Repetition of consonant sounds, often at the end of words 9. **Diction** â Word choice (formal, informal, colloquial, etc.) 10. **Enjambment** â Continuation of a sentence without pause beyond the end of a line in poetry --- ### đ§ **Figurative Language** 1. **Hyperbole** â Extreme exaggeration 2. **Imagery** â Descriptive language that appeals to the senses 3. **Irony** - *Verbal*: Saying the opposite of whatâs meant - *Situational*: When the outcome is the opposite of what's expected - *Dramatic*: Audience knows something characters donât 4. **Metaphor** â A direct comparison without using "like" or "as" 5. **Metonymy** â Substituting the name of one thing with something closely related (e.g. "The crown" for royalty) 6. **Synecdoche** â A part representing the whole (e.g. "All hands on deck") 7. **Personification** â Giving human traits to nonhuman things 8. **Simile** â A comparison using "like" or "as" 9. **Symbol** â An object, character, or color that represents something beyond itself --- ### âïž **Poetic & Rhetorical Terms** 1. **Caesura** â A pause in a line of poetry, often marked by punctuation 2. **Couplet** â Two lines of poetry that usually rhyme 3. **Iambic Pentameter** â A line with five iambs (unstressed-stressed syllables) 4. **Blank Verse** â Unrhymed iambic pentameter 5. **Free Verse** â Poetry with no fixed meter or rhyme 6. **Elegy** â A mournful poem, often for the dead 7. **Ode** â A lyric poem expressing emotion, often in honor of something 8. **Sonnet** â A 14-line poem with a specific rhyme scheme (Shakespearean or Petrarchan) --- ### đ **Narrative & Structure Terms** 1. **Tone** â The author's attitude toward the subject 2. **Mood** â The feeling or atmosphere the reader experiences 3. **Theme** â The central idea or message in a work 4. **Motif** â A recurring element that has symbolic significance 5. **Foil** â A character who contrasts with another character to highlight traits 6. **Foreshadowing** â Clues or hints about what will happen later 7. **Juxtaposition** â Placing two elements side by side to present a contrast 8. **Point of View** â Perspective from which the story is told (1st, 2nd, 3rd person) 9. **Stream of Consciousness** â Narrative style that mimics thoughts and feelings 10. **Frame Narrative** â A story within a story --- Want me to make flashcards, a quiz, or a PDF study guide with these? Or need help using them in a literary analysis essay?