Determine Literal and Nonliteral Word Meanings

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3rd Grade Reading › Determine Literal and Nonliteral Word Meanings

Questions 1 - 10
1

Read the story. Ava stayed home from school because she felt under the weather. She sneezed and sipped warm tea. “I hope you feel better soon,” Mom said. What does “under the weather” mean in this story?

She is sick

She is standing under a cloud

She is playing outside

She is very excited

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'under the weather' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean Ava is standing beneath weather or a cloud, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Ava staying home from school, sneezing, sipping warm tea, and Mom hoping she feels better. The context clues include staying home from school, sneezing, and drinking tea for comfort. Choice A is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Under the weather' means she is sick. In the story, Ava has symptoms of illness (sneezing) and is staying home from school while drinking warm tea. The expression is used to describe feeling ill. When the author says 'under the weather,' readers understand that Ava is sick, not that she's literally beneath weather. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice B is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean Ava is actually standing under a cloud or weather, but rather that she's feeling sick. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (person standing under a rain cloud) vs. figurative meaning (sick person in bed) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says Ava felt under the weather. Is she really under weather? No, she's inside. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she's home from school sneezing. So 'under the weather' must mean sick.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

2

Read the story. Mia looked outside and groaned. “It’s raining cats and dogs,” she said, as water poured off the roof. She grabbed her boots and umbrella and ran to the bus. What does “raining cats and dogs” mean in this story?

it is raining very hard

it is raining a little bit

it will stop raining soon

small pets are falling from the sky

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'raining cats and dogs' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean small pets are falling from the sky, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Mia looking outside, groaning, and seeing water pouring off the roof, then grabbing boots and an umbrella. The context clues include the water pouring, her groaning, and preparing for heavy rain. Choice B is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Raining cats and dogs' means it is raining very hard. In the story, Mia is dealing with a downpour that requires boots and an umbrella to go out. The expression is used to show the intensity of the rain in a fun, exaggerated way. When the author says 'raining cats and dogs,' readers understand that it's pouring rain, not that actual animals are falling. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice A is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean small pets are falling from the sky, but rather that it's raining very hard. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

3

Read the story. “This math page is a piece of cake,” Nora said after one quick look. She finished in minutes and helped her friend. What does “piece of cake” mean?

it is too hard to do

she is eating dessert

it is messy and sticky

it is very easy

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'piece of cake' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean it is a dessert, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Nora looking at a math page, finishing quickly, and helping her friend. The context clues include her quick completion and ease. Choice A is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Piece of cake' means it is very easy. In the story, Nora finds the math page simple and finishes in minutes. The expression is used to show how effortless the task was. When the author says 'piece of cake,' readers understand that it's easy, not that she's eating dessert. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice B is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean she is eating dessert, but rather that it is very easy. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

4

Read the story. Mia ran to the window and gasped. “It’s raining cats and dogs!” she said as water splashed off the steps. Dad laughed and handed her a raincoat. “That means it’s raining very hard,” he explained. What does “raining cats and dogs” mean in this story?

It is windy and cold outside

It is raining very hard

Animals are falling from the sky

It is barely raining at all

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'raining cats and dogs' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean actual cats and dogs are falling from the sky, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Mia looking out the window at heavy rain with water splashing off the steps. The context clues include Dad explaining the meaning and the description of water splashing. Choice B is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Raining cats and dogs' means it is raining very hard. In the story, Mia sees water splashing off the steps and Dad hands her a raincoat while explaining the expression. The expression is used to show emphasis about how heavily it's raining. When the author says 'raining cats and dogs,' readers understand that it's raining heavily, not that animals are falling from the sky. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice A is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean animals are actually falling from the sky, but rather that it's raining very hard. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says raining cats and dogs. Are cats and dogs actually falling? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, there's water splashing and Dad gives a raincoat. So 'raining cats and dogs' must mean raining very hard.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

5

Read the story. After running at recess, Ben said, "I could eat a horse!" His stomach growled, and he asked for a big sandwich. What does "eat a horse" mean in this passage?

he is very hungry

he is not hungry at all

he will buy a horse

he wants to eat meat only

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'eat a horse' is a hyperbole. Literally, this would mean consuming an entire horse, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Ben after running at recess, with his stomach growling and asking for a big sandwich. The context clues include running, stomach growling, and asking for a big sandwich, indicating extreme hunger. Choice B is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Eat a horse' means he is very hungry. In the story, Ben's activity leads to a growling stomach and desire for a large meal. The expression is used to exaggerate his hunger. When the author says 'eat a horse,' readers understand that he is famished, not that he wants to eat meat only or buy a horse. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice C is incorrect because it takes the expression literally in a wrong way. The author doesn't mean he will buy a horse, but rather he is very hungry. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

6

Read the passage. The coach said, “You hit the nail on the head,” when Sam guessed the answer. Sam had explained it exactly right, and the team nodded. What does “hit the nail on the head” mean here?

He got the answer exactly right

He made a silly mistake

He used a hammer to build something

He shouted too loudly

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'hit the nail on the head' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean Sam used a hammer to strike a nail, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Sam guessing an answer, the coach praising him, and the text explicitly stating Sam 'had explained it exactly right.' The context clues include Sam guessing correctly and the phrase 'explained it exactly right.' Choice B is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Hit the nail on the head' means he got the answer exactly right. In the story, Sam guessed the answer and the coach praised him because he explained it perfectly. The expression is used to show precision and accuracy. When the author says 'hit the nail on the head,' readers understand that Sam was exactly correct, not that he used a hammer. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice A is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean Sam actually used a hammer to build something, but rather that he got the answer exactly right. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (person hammering a nail) vs. figurative meaning (person getting answer exactly right) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says Sam hit the nail on the head. Did he really use a hammer? No, they're discussing answers. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, he explained the answer exactly right. So 'hit the nail on the head' must mean got it exactly right.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

7

Read the passage. The snow was a white blanket covering the yard. It hid the grass and made everything look smooth and bright. What does “white blanket” mean here?

the yard turned into a bed

snow covered the ground

snow made the yard muddy

a blanket fell from the sky

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'white blanket' is a metaphor. Literally, this would mean a blanket fell from the sky, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes snow covering the yard, hiding grass, and making everything smooth and bright. The context clues include the snow's appearance and effect on the landscape. Choice A is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'White blanket' means snow covered the ground. In the story, the snow is depicted as layering the yard like a blanket. The expression is used to create a vivid image of the snow's coverage. When the author says 'white blanket,' readers understand that it's a comparison to snow's blanketing effect, not an actual blanket. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice B is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean a blanket fell from the sky, but rather that snow covered the ground. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

8

Read the passage. The class waited for the bus after the museum trip. “We waited forever,” Malik said, rubbing his arms in the cold. The bus was only ten minutes late, but it felt very long to him. When it finally arrived, everyone cheered and climbed aboard. What does “waited forever” mean in this passage?

They waited for one second

They forgot to wait at all

They waited a long time

They will never go home

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'waited forever' is hyperbole. Literally, this would mean they will never go home or waited eternally, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes the class waiting for the bus, Malik rubbing his arms in the cold, the bus being only ten minutes late but feeling very long, and everyone cheering when it arrived. The context clues include the bus being ten minutes late and it feeling very long to him. Choice A is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Waited forever' means they waited a long time. In the story, the wait is exaggerated to express how tedious it felt, though it was only ten minutes. The expression is used for emphasis on the perceived duration. When the author says 'waited forever', readers understand that the wait seemed endless but was actually finite, not that they will never go home. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice B is incorrect because this takes the expression somewhat literally or exaggerates incorrectly. The author doesn't mean they will never go home, but rather they waited a long time. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

9

Read the story. Mia looked outside and groaned. “It’s raining cats and dogs,” she said, as water splashed off the steps. She grabbed her raincoat and boots, and Dad held an umbrella over her head. They hurried to the car, laughing at how wet the sidewalk was. What does “raining cats and dogs” mean in this passage?

The rain has stopped

It is snowing a little

Raining very hard

Pets are falling from the sky

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'raining cats and dogs' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean pets are falling from the sky, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes Mia looking outside and seeing water splashing off the steps, with her grabbing a raincoat and boots. The context clues include the water splashing, using an umbrella, and the wet sidewalk. Choice A is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'Raining cats and dogs' means raining very hard. In the story, Mia groans at the heavy rain outside, and they hurry to the car under an umbrella while laughing at the wetness. The expression is used to show emphasis on how intensely it's raining. When the author says 'raining cats and dogs', readers understand that it's pouring rain, not that pets are falling from the sky. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice B is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean pets are falling from the sky, but rather it's raining very hard. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

10

Read the story. The math page looked long, but Ms. Park said, “This will be a piece of cake.” Ben tried the first problem and finished it quickly. Soon he was solving the rest with ease, and he felt proud. The work was not hard after all. What does “a piece of cake” mean in this passage?

Something very messy

Something very easy

A sweet snack to eat

Something that takes all day

Explanation

This question tests determining word meanings and distinguishing literal from nonliteral language (CCSS.RL.3.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing literal from nonliteral language). Students must understand figurative expressions and recognize when language is not meant literally. Literal language means exactly what it says (The snow is cold = snow is actually cold). Nonliteral or figurative language uses words in creative ways that don't mean exactly what they say (Her smile was sunshine = smile wasn't actually sunshine, but was bright and warm like it). Types of nonliteral language include: Idioms (common expressions like 'raining cats and dogs' = raining hard), Similes (comparisons using like/as: 'fast as lightning' = very fast), Metaphors (comparisons without like/as: 'stars were diamonds' = sparkled brightly), Personification (giving human qualities to things: 'wind whispered' = made soft sound), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration: 'weighs a ton' = very heavy). Context clues help readers figure out what figurative language means. In this passage, the expression 'a piece of cake' is an idiom. Literally, this would mean a sweet snack to eat, but that doesn't make sense in this context. The passage describes the math page looking long but Ben finishing the first problem quickly, solving the rest with ease, and feeling proud. The context clues include Ms. Park saying it will be easy and the work not being hard after all. Choice B is correct because it gives the nonliteral meaning of the expression. 'A piece of cake' means something very easy. In the story, Ben tries the problems and completes them without difficulty. The expression is used to show how simple the task is. When the author says 'a piece of cake', readers understand that it's effortless, not that it's a sweet snack to eat. This interpretation makes sense with the context and captures the figurative meaning. Choice A is incorrect because this takes the expression literally. The author doesn't mean a sweet snack to eat, but rather something very easy. Figurative language uses words creatively, not literally. This error occurs when students take figurative language literally, don't use context clues, confuse expressions, or don't recognize nonliteral language. To help students: Explicitly teach common idioms appropriate for grade 3 (raining cats and dogs, piece of cake, all ears, on cloud nine, under the weather, hit the nail on the head). Create anchor charts with figurative language types and examples. Teach students to ask: Does this make sense literally? (If no, it's probably figurative). What's really happening in the story? (Use context to interpret). Practice identifying: Similes (has 'like' or 'as'), Metaphors (says X is Y), Personification (gives human qualities to things), Hyperbole (extreme exaggeration). Use illustrations: Draw literal interpretation (raining actual cats and dogs) vs. figurative meaning (heavy rain) to show difference humorously. Read aloud picture books with rich figurative language. Create 'Literal vs. Figurative' sorts where students categorize sentences. Model think-aloud: 'The text says her heart melted. Did her heart actually melt? No, that's impossible. So this must be figurative. Looking at the context, she saw a cute puppy and felt tender feelings. So 'heart melted' must mean she felt love or tenderness.' Practice with poems, stories, and songs that use figurative language. Encourage students to use figurative language in their own writing. Watch for: Students who always interpret literally, don't use context clues, confuse similar expressions, or can't distinguish figurative from literal. Provide explicit instruction in recognizing and interpreting nonliteral language with many examples and guided practice.

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