Across
- 1. Long fictional works with chapters and what we read at the end of the year.
- 5. Poetry that takes the shape of its subject.
- 8. Strong desire to succeed or achieve, no matter what.
- 9. Expressing thoughts in written form.
- 10. Communicating ideas aloud.
- 11. Persuasive appeal that evokes emotion.
- 13. Consuming a variety of written texts.
- 15. Written lines that often use rhythm and imagery.
- 18. When an object represents a larger idea.
- 23. The perspective from which a story is told.
- 24. 3 supernatural figures in Macbeth.
- 25. A genre meant to scare or shock.
- 26. The central idea or message of a text.
- 29. A speech revealing a character’s private thoughts when the actor is alone on stage.
- 30. A reasoned claim supported with evidence.
- 33. The art of convincing someone to think or act a certain way.
- 34. Tools or platforms used to share messages or create images.
- 35. A page altered so only some words remain visible.
Down
- 2. Brief fictional narratives.
- 3. Persuasive appeal based on credibility.
- 4. The voice telling the story.
- 6. A poem made entirely of lines from other poems.
- 7. Language that uses all 5 senses to describe things.
- 12. A person, animal, or figure in a story.
- 13. Thinking deeply about an experience or personal growth.
- 14. he feeling created in the reader.
- 16. A comparison using “like” or “as.”
- 17. A prediction of the future.
- 19. The nobleman who kills Macbeth.
- 20. A story centered on solving a puzzle or crime.
- 21. A comparison without using “like” or “as.”
- 22. Persuasive appeal that uses logic or facts.
- 27. The problem in a story.
- 28. A weapon Macbeth hallucinates before killing.
- 31. Shakespeare’s tragic Scottish king and the name of the play.
- 32. The author’s attitude toward the subject.
