Across
- 3. References, within a literary text, to a famous mythological, historical, biblical, or literary person, place, or event found in another literary work.
- 5. The feeling an author invokes in the reader through a piece of writing
- 10. a struggle between two forces
- 11. a contrast between what is expected to happen and what actually occurs
- 13. A set of lines in a poem set apart from other sets of lines by space
- 14. calling something something else (WITHOUT using the words “like," “as,” or "than")
- 15. A comparison using the words “like," “as,” or "than"
- 16. an object that represents an idea
- 18. The repetition of the same/similar sounds at the beginning of each word in a sentence (e.g., Peter Parker, Clark Kent, Bruce Banner)
- 19. The category, type, or classification of literature
- 21. A character who provides a contrast to the protagonist in a story
Down
- 1. The perspective from which a story is told
- 2. The sequence of events that make up a story
- 4. Writing that appeals to one or more of the five senses: sight, taste, touch, hearing, and smell in order to paint a picture in a reader’s mind
- 5. a concept that reoccurs throughout the text
- 6. The time and place in which a story unfolds.
- 7. When something non-human is given human characteristics
- 8. The description of a character's physical traits (how a character looks), point of view, personality, private thoughts, and actions
- 9. hen an author provides a hint that lets the reader know something is going to happen
- 12. A figure of speech in which an author or speaker purposely and obviously exaggerates to an extreme
- 17. the work’s message
- 20. A reference to an event that took place prior to the story/to the beginning of the story
