Romeo and Juliet Vocabulary Cassidy
Across
- 3. A literary technique, originally used in Greek tragedy, by which the full significance of a characters words or actions are cleat to the audience or reader although unknown to the character.
- 5. Mot returned or rewarded.
- 6. A remark of passage by a character in a play that is intended to be heard by the audience but unheard by the other character in the play.
- 8. A figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction.
- 10. Two lines of verse, usually in the same meter and joined by rhyme, that form a unit.
- 12. A thing regarded or representative or symbolic of something else, especially something abstract.
- 13. A poem in the form of a speech or narrative by an imagined person in which the speaker inadvertently reveals aspects of their character while despairing a particular situation or series of events.
- 14. A setback in a enterprise; a defect.
- 15. Be incompatible or at variance; clash
- 17. A play dealing with tragic events and having an unhappy ending especially one concerning the downfall of the main character.
- 19. A verse without rhyme, especially that which use iamba pentameter.
- 20. Defined as when a poem has lines ending with words that sound the same.
- 22. Be a warning or indication of a future event.
- 24. The formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named.
- 25. Make a joke exploiting the different possible meaning of a word.
- 26. Take part in a conversation or discussion to resolve a problem.
Down
- 1. A large organized group of singers, especially one that performs together with an orchestra or opera company.
- 2. A line of verse with five metrical feet each consisting of one short or unstressed syllable fallowed by one long or stressed syllable for example two households, both alike indignity.
- 4. The subject of a talk, a piece of writing, a person's thoughts, or on exhibition, a topic.
- 7. A poem of 14 lines using any number of formal rhyme schemes, in English typically have 10 syllables per line.
- 9. The ordered pattern of rhymes at the ends of the lines of a poem or verse.
- 11. Self-consciously suffering and has given himself up to the power of his mistress.
- 16. A figure of speech involving the compromise of one thing with another thing of affect kind used to make ascription more emphatic or vivid.
- 18. An event or action that leads to another event or situation.
- 21. A fanciful expression in writing or speech; an elaborate metaphor.
- 23. An act of specking one's thoughts aloud when by oneself or regardless of any hear eds, especially by a character in a play.