Rhetorical devices
Across
- 3. (*direct opposites) No pain, no gain.
- 4. Five years ago, I went to the store and met some clowns. Those clowns gave me the advice I am sharing with you now.
- 6. The treaty led to a violent peace.
- 7. The beautiful valley spread its arms out and embraced us.
- 9. The plate exploded into a million pieces.
- 10. To my dog, the park is the Garden of Eden
- 13. Can we really know what our place in the universe is? We have asked ourselves this question for millennia.
- 14. Ashley said it was a beautiful day while drying off from the drenching rain. (Ashley ironically referred to poor weather as “beautiful.”)
- 15. *refers to making a statement that seems self-contradictory or impossible but actually makes sense (e.g. Youth is wasted on the young)
- 16. (expl. repetition of consonants or consonant sounds. e.g. Mike likes Ike’s bike.
- 17. When Senator Jackson said “numbers don’t lie,” he forgot that his first name wasn’t “Numbers.”
- 18. Oh, yeah, he is a great guy. A great guy who took the last slice of pizza.
- 20. Life is like a box of chocolates: you never know what you are going to get.
Down
- 1. He was a wolf among sheep.
- 2. *meaning loud sounds e.g. The gnashing of teeth and screeching of bats kept me awake.
- 5. The cricket ball struck him in a sensitive area.
- 6. The thunder boomed and the lightning crashed.
- 8. The time ticked tentatively by
- 11. I came, I saw, I conquered.
- 12. She and Lee see the bees in the tree.
- 17. It was as hot as a desert this morning.
- 19. The farmer tried to get his cows to get along, but they insisted on having a beef with each other.