Comedy Literary Terms
Across
- 2. The author’s attitude toward a subject
- 3. Everything within the text represents something beyond the text
- 4. Characters that are opposite of each other
- 6. The expansion of the conflict
- 7. The force or person which is against the protagonist or main character
- 8. Repeating beginning consonant sounds
- 10. Two syllables
- 11. Language that is not literal (such as it was raining cats and dogs)
- 13. Hints of event to come later in the work
- 15. Ends happily – with Shakespeare they end with weddings
- 16. After the occurrence of a tragic event a scene is provided to release tension
- 18. The author’s choice of words
Down
- 1. The dictionary meaning of a word which has no feelings associated with it
- 5. The feelings associated with a word beyond its literal meaning
- 6. The author’s development of the characters whether through indirect means (such as their actions) or by direct means (such as saying exactly what the character is like)
- 9. A character speaks aside to the audience or another character where other characters can’t hear
- 12. The beginning of the work where the setting and characters are introduced
- 14. In fiction it is conversation set off by quote marks and in a play it is set off by a character’s name
- 17. The struggle or issue needing resolution in a work
- 19. The highest point of intensity of the literature which turns things around