Across
- 5. A judgment based on reasoning rather than on a direct or explicit statement.
- 7. a person, animal, being, creature, or thing in a story
- 14. of an action, event, or trend.
- 16. a text genre that is fiction involving magical elements
- 19. when you take something directly from the text, you must use _______________.
- 20. to place characters, situations, or ideas together to show differing features in literary selections.
- 22. and ________ An organizational structure in which the writer analyzes both the reasons and the
- 24. __________ language can be extreme exaggeration.
- 25. To examine and judge carefully
- 27. a word or phrase that means exactly or nearly the same as another word or phrase in the same language
- 28. a person, place, or thing
- 29. A person, animal, or thing telling the story or giving an account of something.
- 30. The quality of a literary or informative text that makes the characters and/or situations seem funny, amusing, or ridiculous.
- 31. a struggle between different forces in a text
- 33. an account of someone's life written by someone else.
- 34. an underlying message or the big idea of a story
Down
- 1. The author’s central thought; the chief topic of a text expressed or implied in a word or phrase; the topic sentence of a paragraph.
- 2. to place characters, situations, or ideas together to show common features in literary selections.
- 3. describes a person, place, or thing
- 4. __________ fiction -- A genre of fiction that is based on historical settings, events, or people.
- 6. A piece of information provided objectively and presented as true.
- 8. _________ person point of view relates events as they are perceived by a single character uses words like "I" and "me".
- 9. the time or place something happens
- 10. the pictures in the story
- 11. the person who write the story
- 12. An arrangement of lines of verse in a pattern usually repeated throughout a
- 13. _________ writing - its purpose may be to provide a reader with knowledge of a particular topic, to increase a reader’s understanding of a process, or to make concepts or ideas accessible to readers.
- 15. An occurrence within a piece of literary text that comprises the plot
- 17. The conversation between or among characters in a literary work.
- 18. facts, statistics, details, quotations, or other sources of data and information that provide support for claims or an analysis; can be evaluated by others.
- 21. the category to which a literary work belongs to ex. non-fiction
- 23. To capture all of the most important parts of the original text
- 26. A word that is the opposite in meaning to another word.
- 32. A personal view, attitude, or appraisal.
