Across
- 4. Imagery of sight.
- 5. Everything that is seen or heard on stage.
- 7. Imagery of smell.
- 10. A complex, fully-developed character, usually prone to change.
- 12. The character with whom the protagonist is engaged in a struggle.
- 15. The story is told from the first person "I” personal point-of-view, usually that of the main character.
- 16. A literary work in which the symbols, characters, and events come to represent, in a somewhat point-to-point fashion, a different metaphysical, political, or social situation.
- 17. Imagery of touch.
- 19. A story told in the third person; the narrator's knowledge, control, and prerogatives are unlimited, allowing “authorial” subjectivity.
- 20. The repetition of similar vowel sounds followed by different consonant sounds, especially in words close together.
- 21. The central idea or theme of the play, used by the playwright to illustrate some truth.
Down
- 1. Imagery of taste.
- 2. A one-dimensional character, typically not central to the story.
- 3. A concrete object/image that stand for an abstract subject.
- 6. A story told in the third person in which the narrative voice is associated with a major or minor character who is not able to “see/know” all, may only be able to relate the thoughts of one or some characters but not others, may not know what happened “off stage” or in the past.
- 8. The repetition of the same or similar final consonant sounds on accented syllables or in important words.
- 9. The type of imagery that deals with creating a specific feeling or emotion within the reader.
- 11. Imagery that deals with the movement or action of objects or people.
- 13. These can be either round or flat characters, but they do not change during the story.
- 14. A developing character, usually at the center of the action, who changes or grows to a new awareness of life.
- 18. A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable
