Shakespeare Literary Terms

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Across
  1. 2. A combination of contradictory terms(EX: Jumbo Shrimp).
  2. 3. The audience or reader knows something important that a character in a play or story does not know.
  3. 4. Character who does not changes much in the course of a story.
  4. 11. Humor added that lessens the seriousness of a plot.
  5. 12. A speech by one character in a play.
  6. 15. A play, novel,or other narrative that depicts serious and important events in which the main character comes to an unhappy end.
  7. 17. Event or detail that is inappropriate for the time period.
  8. 19. A short introduction at the beginning of a play that gives a brief overview of the plot.
  9. 20. A play on multiple meanings of a word, or on two words that sound alike but have different meanings.
Down
  1. 1. Character who changes as a result of the story's events.
  2. 5. Two consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme; couplets often signal the character the EXIT of a character or the end of a scene.
  3. 6. Words that are spoken by a character in a play to the audience or to another character but that are not supposed to be overheard by the others onstage.
  4. 7. A group who says things at the same time.
  5. 8. A story written to be acted for an audience.
  6. 9. Poetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter each line of poetry contains 5 iambs, or metrical feet, that consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
  7. 10. An unusually long speech in which a character who is on a stage alone expresses his or her thoughts aloud.
  8. 13. A writer or speaker says one thing, but really means something completely different.
  9. 14. Direct, unadorned form of language, written or spoken, in ordinary use.
  10. 16. Fourteen-line lyric poem that is usually written in iambic pentameter and that has one of several rhyme schemes (Shakespearean-3 four-line units or quatrains, followed by a concluding two-line unit, or couplet; abab).
  11. 18. Character who is used as a contrast to another character; writer sets off/intensifies the qualities of two characters this way.