Is the pair a Smile (same meaning) or a Frown (opposite meaning)?
Every one sorted. That is Smile or Frown, run on this unit's words.
Way 2 of 6
Word Family
Learn the part a word is built from, and the whole family comes with it.
Runs on:transmit
Match each root or word part to what it means, then see the family it builds.
Word part
What it means
The root mit, also spelled miss, means to send: transmit is send across, permit is let send through, and transmission is a sending. Learn the one root, and a whole shelf of sending words unlocks itself.
Every pair matched, and the family lit. That is Word Family.
Way 3 of 6
Word Detective
No dictionary needed. The sentence around a word gives its meaning away.
Runs on:transmissiontransmittransient
The sentence around the blank supplies the meaning. No glossary, just the clues.
Every case closed on the evidence alone. That is Word Detective.
Way 4 of 6
Many Hats
Some words work more than one job. The job decides which character owns the word.
Runs on:reject
Sort each sentence by which character owns the word doing its job there.
Sort by the job, not the spelling. As a verb, reject means to throw a thing back; as a noun, a reject is the flawed item that was thrown out. The job names the owner.
Every hat on the right head. That is Many Hats.
Way 5 of 6
Two Ways to Say It
The Mayor and Slang can mean the same thing. The moment picks the word.
The Mayor and Slang mean the same thing. Match his formal word to Slang's streetwise one.
The Mayor says
Slang says
Same meanings, two wardrobes. That is Two Ways to Say It.
Way 6 of 6
What Kind of Saying?
A figure of speech does not mean its words literally. An idiom is a saying whose words do not add up to its meaning, similes compare with like or as, and metaphors say one thing is another.
Can you hang with Slang (figuratively)? Sort each saying by what kind it is: an idiom, a simile, or a metaphor.
Every figure sorted and understood. That is What Kind of Saying?