English

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Across
  1. 3. Abstract term refers to an idea or quality, such as truth or sweetness.
  2. 4. Lines of unrhymed iambic pentameter
  3. 5. Concrete term refers to something which can be touched or seen, such as book or sky.
  4. 10. An end-stop occurs when a line of poetry ends with a period or definite punctuation mark, such as a colon. When lines are end-stopped, each line is its own phrase or unit of syntax. So when you read an end-stopped line, you'll naturally pause.
  5. 12. Rhyme that occurs within a line of poetry
  6. 13. Informal language or phrases
  7. 14. Think of meter as a poem's underlying structure—the rhythm beneath the words in each line (made up of smaller beats called “feet”)- this answers the question- “how many” when dealing with “feet.”
  8. 16. The creation of a literary character through the use of physical appearance, thoughts, actions, and dialogue of the character.
Down
  1. 1. A metrical unit composed of stressed and unstressed syllables
  2. 2. A line of verse with five metrical feet consisting of an unstressed stressed unit pattern.
  3. 6. A couplet consists of two rhyming lines having the same meter.
  4. 7. Enjambment occurs when a phrase carries over a line-break without a major pause. When you read an enjambed line, the sense of it encourages you to keep right on reading the next line, without stopping for a breather.
  5. 8. A grouped set of lines within a poem, usually set off from other stanzas by a blank line, indentation, or other signal spacing
  6. 9. A person in a story or poem.
  7. 11. A unit of language into which a poem or play is divided
  8. 15. A repetition of sounds in words or lines of verse
  9. 17. A line, or part of a line, or a group of lines, which is repeated in the course of a poem (sometimes with slight changes), usually at the end of a stanza