Spring Final Review

12345678910111213141516171819
Across
  1. 3. Repeating the same consonant sound
  2. 7. A word that sounds like what it represents
  3. 12. What happens in a story
  4. 13. The comparison of two things NOT using like or as.
  5. 15. When a statement gives a hint about later plot points
  6. 17. A comparison of two things that uses "like" or "as." For example, “He is ashungry as a horse & he is as quiet as a mouse.”
  7. 18. The use of words to convey the opposite of their literal meaning; a statementor situation where the meaning is contradicted by the appearance orpresentation of the idea.
  8. 19. Figurative language which appeals to the senses, such as sight
Down
  1. 1. Objects are given human characteristics like "Trees were dancing on the wind"
  2. 2. To use exaggeration or overstatement for emphasis. Ex: "These books weigh a ton!"
  3. 4. A common expression understood figuratively because the literal definition makes no sense. Examples- “break a leg” or “drive me up a wall”.
  4. 5. The perspective the story is told from
  5. 6. A scene that takes place in the past
  6. 8. The bad guy/villain of a story
  7. 9. Figures of speech in which opposite or contradictory terms appear side by side,such as: jumbo shrimp, act naturally, alone together, found missing.
  8. 10. The time and place a story takes place
  9. 11. How the reader feels about a text
  10. 13. The emotion that readers get
  11. 14. The author's central message
  12. 16. An object or image that represents something else