7th Grade Figurative Language Puzzle 2021!

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Across
  1. 1. a funny exaggeration (i.e. "I could eat a horse!")
  2. 5. the last name of the author of "Annabel Lee"
  3. 7. the repetition of consonant sounds within nearby words (i.e. "pitter patter")
  4. 9. the type of rhyme when the end sounds of words are close to the same, but not perfectly matched (i.e. "Foot" and "Fruit")
  5. 10. when the author gives readers a clue about something that will happen later
  6. 13. a comparison without using "like" or "as"
  7. 14. a reference to a famous person, place, event, or literary work (i.e. "He's such a romeo.")
  8. 15. the type of rhyme when the location of the rhyme is at the end of two separate lines of poetry (i.e. "twinkle twinkle little star/How I wonder what you are")
  9. 16. the type of rhyme when the location of the rhyme is within the same line (i.e. "The stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes")
  10. 17. the repetition of vowel sounds within nearby words (i.e. "Hey! He ate the last grapes!")
  11. 18. a comparison using "like" or "as"
  12. 19. a sound word; a word that looks like the sound it describes (i.e. "boom!" "splash!")
  13. 20. a word formed by combining two words with opposite or contradictory meanings (i.e. "jumbo shrimp")
  14. 22. the repetition of sounds at the ends of words, usually used in poetry (i.e. "fox," "socks," and "box")
Down
  1. 2. the type of rhyme when the end sounds of words are exactly the same "i.e. "Cat" and "Hat")
  2. 3. the feelings or ideas associated with a word
  3. 4. to give human qualities to something inhuman or inanimate (i.e. "the moon smiled at me.")
  4. 6. the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables (rhythmic feet) in a line of poetry (i.e. Iambic pentameter)
  5. 8. the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of nearby words (i.e. "Peter Piper")
  6. 11. the last name of the author of "My Mother Pieced Quilts"
  7. 12. a word's literal dictionary definition
  8. 21. the audible pattern within a poem; a beat that is created with stressed and unstressed syllables. A single unit is called a "foot."