Study Guide
Across
- 4. The third stage of the hero cycle
- 5. A critical statement (satire)
- 6. A conclusion of the story
- 7. The second stage of the hero cycle
- 10. An author giving traits to a character
- 12. Giving human characteristics to non-human things
- 16. The part of the story after the turning point, where the conflict has been resolved
- 17. Overstating to a point where flaws are obvious
- 18. The author's attempt to make a story seem real
- 21. Language specific to a group of people or certain professions
- 23. The first stage of the hero cycle
- 25. Background information generally about characters and setting
Down
- 1. When roles are atypical or switched around
- 2. The problem in a story
- 3. Where a story or setting does not match up to what it would be expected to be
- 7. Where the action of the story begins
- 8. The atmosphere of the story
- 9. Where the audience/reader knows more than the character
- 11. The events that lead to the turning point
- 13. A part of the story where everything changes
- 14. Used in writing and appeals to the senses
- 15. The events that make up the story
- 16. Hints about what is to happen later on
- 19. Comparing two unlike things using "like" or "as"
- 20. Comparing two unlike things by saying one is the other
- 22. Where or when the story takes place
- 24. Imitation