English Review

12345678910111213141516171819
Across
  1. 1. A hint or warning about what is going to happen next.
  2. 3. To pair two contrasting ideas with one another.
  3. 5. An exaggerated description.
  4. 9. The "villain" of the story - the character who the protagonist is trying to stop.
  5. 11. Saying something figuratively is something else.
  6. 12. The main character of a story.
  7. 14. A milder way of saying something unpleasant. For example, "We're letting you go" instead of "You're fired."
  8. 17. The time and place in which a story occurs.
  9. 18. Words that sound like the sound they describe. For example boom, vroom, click, neigh, etc.
  10. 19. The repetition of consonant sounds in a text.
Down
  1. 2. The 16th/17th century playwright who wrote Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Twelfth Night, and MacBeth, among many others.
  2. 4. A collection of your best work designed to showcase what you're capable of.
  3. 6. The place where you put all of your sources.
  4. 7. The practice of stealing someone else's work and claiming it as your own. This can happen accidentally if you don't properly cite your sources.
  5. 8. Characters speaking to one another.
  6. 10. A recurring image or idea within a text.
  7. 13. The main message or idea communicated by the text.
  8. 15. A word that has the same meaning as another word.
  9. 16. Saying something is like something else.
  10. 19. A reference to another text/literary work.