Across
- 2. Deduce or conclude from reasoning rather than from explicit statements.
- 4. The circumstances that form the setting for an event, statement, or idea.
- 5. The use of vivid, descriptive language to appeal to the five senses.
- 6. Show or prove to be right or reasonable.
- 7. To ascertain or establish exactly, typically as a result of research or calculation.
- 9. To declare or indicate in advance.
- 10. The expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite.
- 11. The emotion the author strives to evoke in a reader.
- 13. An argument or set of reasons put forth to oppose an idea or theory developed in another statement.
- 14. A character who recounts the events of a story or narrative poem.
- 15. The principle adversary of the main character in a dramatic work.
- 17. The time and place where the narrative of a story unfolds.
- 18. Quote a passage, work or author as evidence for or justification of an argument or statement.
- 19. The point at which the main conflict of a dramatic work is resolved.
Down
- 1. A recurring, significant element such as in image, sound, object, or phrase.
- 3. The available body of facts or information indicating whether a proposition is true or valid.
- 4. An assertion of the truth of something, typically one that is disputed or in doubt.
- 8. A word or group of words that functions in a sentence as subject, object, or prepositional object
- 9. The leading character of a dramatic work.
- 12. A verse. A group of lines forming the basic units of a poem.
- 16. To combine a number of things into a coherent whole.
