Across
- 2. this focuses our attention on a wide angle or close up. Larger, close-up images tend to pull us into the world of that particular character.
- 4. emotion created by the writer
- 7. The recurrence of similar sounds, especially consonants, in close proximity to one another. Example: “And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain thrilled me – filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before”
- 8. fussy, especially about details
- 9. quietly and steadily persevering in detail or exactness
- 11. expressing yourself readily, clearly, effectively
- 12. having or revealing little emotion or feeling to others
- 14. diffusing warmth and friendliness
- 15. ill-mannered and coarse in behavior or appearance
- 17. Word choice
- 18. a contradiction within a text
- 23. When words have the same end sound.
- 26. a reference to a real example (reference to a real person in a fiction story)
- 28. having or showing arrogant superiority
- 29. free from undue bias or preconceived opinions
- 31. question not meant to be answered
- 33. contain a character’s thoughts
- 38. Poems with no formal rhyme and formal metric rhythm schemes. This allows the poem to be shaped completely by the poet.
- 39. idle or indolent especially in a dreamy way
- 40. Primary artist who takes the script and draws the comic. They draw the comic in pencil which then gets inked and colored later on.
- 41. capable of destroying or eating away by chemical action
- 42. When words are arranged in such a way that they make a pattern or beat.
- 45. The ordered pattern of rhymes at the ends of the lines of a poem or verse.
- 47. lines or boxes around a panel(s)
- 48. poems that follow traditional forms, based on formal rhyme schemes and specific patterns of stanza, refrain, and meter.
- 49. massive panels of pictures that take up most or all of a page, or possibly even two pages.
Down
- 1. Putting images next to each other for effect is common in graphic novels and also is the basis for irony in linguistic texts.
- 2. difference in what we perceive versus what is actually true
- 3. The repetition of similar vowel sounds takes place in two or more words in close proximity to each other within a line of poetry or prose. Examples: The light of the fire is a sight. Go slow over the road.
- 5. having a sense of what is considerate in dealing with others
- 6. deeply or seriously thoughtful
- 9. contain character dialogue; communication between/among characters
- 10. The “paragraphs” or sections of poems
- 13. tending to rule in a cruel manner
- 16. short, lyrical poems that are used to express emotions and praise
- 19. writes the story and has the overall vision of how the story will go. They write the dialogue and how the story will progress.
- 20. The lines and borders that contain the panels.
- 21. marked by tenacious unwillingness to yield
- 22. squares or rectangles that contain a single scene
- 24. a symbol above a characters head, like a question mark or a squiggle
- 25. space between panels where the reader infers movement and action between panels
- 27. a term that describes the way some images draw the eye more than others, creating a definite focus using color and shading in various ways
- 30. This person gives the comic color, and add to the weight and vibrancy of the image.
- 32. contain information about a scene or character
- 34. marked by practical hardheaded intelligence
- 35. An image that extends to and/or beyond the edge of the page.
- 36. given to arguing
- 37. openly straightforward and direct without secretiveness
- 40. Perspective (who is telling the story or speaking). This goes beyond 1st person, 3rd person, etc.
- 43. characterized by resoluteness and firmness
- 44. invulnerable to fear or intimidation
- 46. a recurring symbol, image, sound, word, or idea in a literary work. Example: Chinese alphabet/ characters at the top of each page in ABC
