Across
- 1. an indirect reference to a person, place, event, or piece of literature
- 4. the ability to read and write
- 7. a universal idea, lesson, or message in a work of literature
- 10. words or phrases not meant to be taken literally, but used to create an image or effect in the mind of the reader
- 11. an appeal to emotions
- 14. a figure of speech that uses extreme exaggeration to make a point
- 16. something that stands for something else; represents something beyond literal meaning
- 17. the events, situations, or language surrounding a word or phrase that help explain its meaning
- 18. in a poem, a group of lines separated by a space
- 20. an appeal to the speaker's credibility and authority
Down
- 2. a word that describes the sound it makes
- 3. a figure of speech that compares two unalike things using like or as
- 5. the reason or intent in writing (to persuade, inform, entertain)
- 6. the highest point of action in a story, when the conflict reaches its peak
- 8. an appeal to logic
- 9. figure of speech in which an nonhuman thing is given human form or qualities
- 12. the quality of being reliable, trustworthy, and fact-based
- 13. a figure of speech that compares to unalike things
- 15. the pattern of rhyme within a poem
- 19. the repetition of the same letter or sound at the beginning of closely connected words
