Language Arts Jeopardy

Language Arts Jeopardy
ETEC 546
Becky Dell
Authors
Punctuation
Parts of
Speech
Characters
in Books
$100
$100
$100
$100
$200
$200
$200
$200
$300
$300
$300
$300
$400
$400
$400
$400
$500
$500
$500
$500
$100
How the Grinch Stole
Christmas
$100
Dr. Seuss, otherwise
known as Theodore
Geisel
click
$200
The Lord of the
Rings Trilogy
$200
J. R. R. Tolkien
click
$300
Romeo and Juliet
$300
William Shakespeare
click
$400
The Call of the Wild
$400
Jack London
click
$500
Where the Red Fern
Grows
$500
Wilson Rawls
click
$100
You use this to close a
sentence that makes a
statement, gives a mild
command, or makes a polite
request
$100
A period
click
$200
You use this to
separate items in a
series
$200
A comma
click
$300
You use this to link
closely related
independent clauses
$300
A semicolon
click
$400
You use this to signal
possessive case
$400
An apostrophe
click
$500
Three equally spaced dots
that are usually used to
indicate that something
has been omitted from a
quoted passage
$500
Ellipses
click
$100
A person, place,
thing, or idea
$100
Noun
click
$200
Describes a noun
$200
Adjective
click
$300
Describes a verb, an
adjective, and
sometime another
one of itself
$300
Adverb
click
$400
A, an,the
$400
Articles
click
•
Daily Double
This, these, that,
those, my, our,
your, his, her, its,
their
Daily Double
Determiners
click
$100
Charlie, Mr. Wonka,
Grandpa Joe, Grandma
Josephine, Grandpa
George, and Grandma
Georgina
$100
Charlie and the
Chocolate Factory
click
$200
The March Hare, the
Cheshire Cat, the
Queen of Hearts,
and the Mad Hatter
$200
Alice in Wonderland
click
$300
Anne, Margot, Mr.
Dussel, Mr. and
Mrs. Van Daan,
Peter Van Daan
$300
Anne Frank: The Diary
of a Young Girl
click
$400
Marmie, Meg, Jo,
Beth, and Amy
$400
Little Women
click
$500
Ralph, Piggy, Jack,
Roger, and Simon
$500
Lord of the Flies
click