English 1 Semester Review (Fall 2021)

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Across
  1. 1. Type of irony in which what the characters know is different than what the audience knows.
  2. 4. The dictionary meaning of a word.
  3. 7. Clues the author gives about what is going to happen later in the story.
  4. 10. Irony in which what happens turns out to be different from what is expected.
  5. 11. The conversation between two characters.
  6. 13. The emotional meaning of a word (the way a word makes us feel).
  7. 16. When there is a profound difference between what seems to be real and what actually is real.
  8. 18. A comparison between two different things without using like or as.
  9. 19. An intentional and obvious exaggeration, often for humorous effect or emphasis.
  10. 20. When the chronology of a narrative is interrupted to return to earlier events
Down
  1. 2. When character’s speech is heard by audience but not by other characters on stage
  2. 3. Irony in which a character says the opposite of what they really mean.
  3. 5. The vantage point from which the story is told (first person, omniscient, third person, etc..)
  4. 6. When one character gives a lengthy speech to all of the characters on stage.
  5. 8. When a character is alone on stage and speaks to himself. In movies soliloquys are often done with voiceovers, when the audience hear the characters’ thoughts in the character’s voice without the character actually speaking.
  6. 9. To give human attributes to nonhuman entities, including inanimate objects.
  7. 12. Making a decision based on what you've read and what you know.
  8. 14. The central concern or idea of a text
  9. 15. Using like or as to compare two different things.
  10. 17. A character who serves as a contrast to another character.