Across
- 2. the act of developing the intellectual and moral faculties especially by education
- 5. the plan or main story
- 14. something suggested by a word or thing
- 16. a subject or topic of discourse or of artistic representation
- 17. style or manner of expression in speaking or writing
- 20. a particular ethnic affiliation or group
- 21. the capacity to view things in their true relations or relative importance
- 23. narrative poem or tale typically describing the downfall of a great man
- 24. a dramatic sketch performed by one actor
- 25. a process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a common system of symbols, signs, or behavior
- 26. the personality or part which an actor recreates
- 27. discourse intended to persuade
- 28. wish, choice, or opinion openly or formally expressed
- 29. language
- 31. a restatement of a text, passage, or work giving the meaning in another form
- 32. rate of movement
Down
- 1. marked by clear lifelike or vividly realistic description
- 2. to assert in the face of possible contradiction
- 3. the time and place of the action of a literary, dramatic, or cinematic work
- 4. the rhetorical contrast of ideas by means of parallel arrangements of words, clauses, or sentences
- 6. questions
- 7. mental images
- 8. the opposition of persons or forces that gives rise to the dramatic action in a drama or fiction
- 9. an opposing claim
- 10. a category of humankind that shares certain distinctive physical traits
- 11. the act or an instance of repeating or being repeated
- 12. chiefly 20th century philosophical movement embracing diverse doctrines but centering on analysis of individual existence in an unfathomable universe and the plight of the individual who must assume ultimate responsibility for acts of free will without any certain knowledge of what is right or wrong or good or bad
- 13. the principle or ideal of just dealing or right action
- 15. something that furnishes proof
- 18. a narrative composed from personal experience
- 19. the act or process of refuting
- 22. something that stands for or suggests something else by reason of relationship, association, convention, or accidental resemblance
- 30. a state, situation, or series of events involving interesting or intense conflict of forces
