Fall Exam
Across
- 4. Direct comparison between two things
- 6. Rhetoric appeal to persuade through logic/facts
- 8. A literary device that breaks up the flow of the story to talk about past events
- 10. A sentence or phrase that seems to contradict itself
- 13. When humanlike features and qualities are given to objects, animals, or ideas
- 16. A repetition of words at the beginning of successive sentences to create emphasis and rhythm.
- 17. A state of affairs or an event that seems deliberately contrary to what one expects and is often amusing
- 18. When the author hints at something that will be coming in the story creating suspense and curiosity
- 19. When a word, line or phrase is repeated throughout that creates emphasis, rhythm, and unifies the work around a feeling or idea
Down
- 1. Rhetoric appeal to establish credibility
- 2. Two things being put together to compare/contrast
- 3. An indirect or passing reference.
- 5. Two opposing words being put together
- 7. When the story examines the elements of fiction itself
- 9. Exaggerations not meant to be take seriously
- 10. Rhetoric appeal to invoke emotion
- 11. A sentence/phrase with words in wrong order for emphasis
- 12. A direct comparison between two things using like or as
- 14. Two directly opposing things being put together to create a stark contrast
- 15. A key element or idea that recurs through the work of literature