ELA Review

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Across
  1. 3. when annotating a text, a character figures something out (2 words)
  2. 9. when something is being done to the subject of a sentence it is written in this
  3. 11. when the speaker says the opposite of what they really mean; sarcasm is a form of this (2 words)
  4. 13. when a text uses words like ‘you’ and ‘your’ (2 words)
  5. 14. giving human qualities to inanimate objects
  6. 18. the last sentence of an introductory paragraph that lists the 3 main points of an essay (2 words)
  7. 21. when the reader knows more about something than the character (2 words)
  8. 23. when annotating a text, the author stops the action of a story to tell the reader a memory or has a flashback (2 words)
  9. 24. a rhetorical appeal that appeals to the emotion of a reader
  10. 25. a story told from mainly from a first person perspective
  11. 27. when annotating a text, this is when an older character gives advice to a younger character (4 words)
  12. 28. the feeling you, as the reader, get when reading a particular piece of writing
  13. 29. comparison of two or more things without using the words 'like' or 'as'
  14. 30. when one thing stands for or represents something else
Down
  1. 1. when the author brings the reader back to the original point in an argumentative essay
  2. 2. when the subject of a sentence is doing something, the sentence is written in this
  3. 4. the correct way to cite textual evidence when writing an essay (2 words)
  4. 5. an extreme exaggeration
  5. 6. a nice way to say something harsh or unappealing
  6. 7. comparison of two things using 'like' or 'as'
  7. 8. referring to something without mentioning it directly; can be historical, biblical, cultural, or literary
  8. 10. when annotating a text, a word, phrase, or situation that shows up multiple times (3 words)
  9. 12. when a text is written from the narrator’s point of view and uses words like ‘I,’ ‘me’, ‘my’, ‘ours’, etc (2 words)
  10. 15. a conclusion one reaches based on evidence and reasoning
  11. 16. a rhetorical appeal that appeals to the moral character or credibility of someone
  12. 17. when the exact opposite of what you expect to happen actually happens (2 words)
  13. 19. the author's attitude toward a subject
  14. 20. when two or more people are having a conversation we say they are having what?
  15. 22. the opposing viewpoint in an argumentative essay
  16. 26. a rhetorical appeal that appeals to logical thinking or reasoning