Imagery

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Across
  1. 4. Imagery of sight.
  2. 5. Everything that is seen or heard on stage.
  3. 7. Imagery of smell.
  4. 10. A complex, fully-developed character, usually prone to change.
  5. 12. The character with whom the protagonist is engaged in a struggle.
  6. 15. The story is told from the first person "I” personal point-of-view, usually that of the main character.
  7. 16. A literary work in which the symbols, characters, and events come to represent, in a somewhat point-to-point fashion, a different metaphysical, political, or social situation.
  8. 17. Imagery of touch.
  9. 19. A story told in the third person; the narrator's knowledge, control, and prerogatives are unlimited, allowing “authorial” subjectivity.
  10. 20. The repetition of similar vowel sounds followed by different consonant sounds, especially in words close together.
  11. 21. The central idea or theme of the play, used by the playwright to illustrate some truth.
Down
  1. 1. Imagery of taste.
  2. 2. A one-dimensional character, typically not central to the story.
  3. 3. A concrete object/image that stand for an abstract subject.
  4. 6. A story told in the third person in which the narrative voice is associated with a major or minor character who is not able to “see/know” all, may only be able to relate the thoughts of one or some characters but not others, may not know what happened “off stage” or in the past.
  5. 8. The repetition of the same or similar final consonant sounds on accented syllables or in important words.
  6. 9. The type of imagery that deals with creating a specific feeling or emotion within the reader.
  7. 11. Imagery that deals with the movement or action of objects or people.
  8. 13. These can be either round or flat characters, but they do not change during the story.
  9. 14. A developing character, usually at the center of the action, who changes or grows to a new awareness of life.
  10. 18. A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable