English Review
Across
- 1. A hint or warning about what is going to happen next.
- 3. To pair two contrasting ideas with one another.
- 5. An exaggerated description.
- 9. The "villain" of the story - the character who the protagonist is trying to stop.
- 11. Saying something figuratively is something else.
- 12. The main character of a story.
- 14. A milder way of saying something unpleasant. For example, "We're letting you go" instead of "You're fired."
- 17. The time and place in which a story occurs.
- 18. Words that sound like the sound they describe. For example boom, vroom, click, neigh, etc.
- 19. The repetition of consonant sounds in a text.
Down
- 2. The 16th/17th century playwright who wrote Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Twelfth Night, and MacBeth, among many others.
- 4. A collection of your best work designed to showcase what you're capable of.
- 6. The place where you put all of your sources.
- 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.
- 8. Characters speaking to one another.
- 10. A recurring image or idea within a text.
- 13. The main message or idea communicated by the text.
- 15. A word that has the same meaning as another word.
- 16. Saying something is like something else.
- 19. A reference to another text/literary work.