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