Across
- 3. An episode, plot point or event that hooks the reader into the story
- 6. Events or infromation persented to prepare later events
- 7. Exaggerated statement or claim, not ment to be taken liteally
- 9. A phrase in one line into the next without punctuation
- 11. when reality is different from appearance; the implied meaning of a statement is the opposite of its literal or obvious meaning; a contrast between what is expected and what occurs
- 12. Audience has to infer or deduce for themselves
Down
- 1. Storys that are told with events are not real life but can be true to life
- 2. type of category to which a literary work belongs
- 3. Desciption that appeals to senses can be literal or figurative
- 4. A phrase or an expression whose meaning cant be understood from the ordinary meaning the characteristics of the character by observing his/her thought process, behavior, speech, way of talking, appearance, and manner of communication with other characters
- 5. An event or a secean from the past that appears in a narrtive that is not in chronnological in order to fill in infromation
- 6. tools that writers use to create imagery
- 8. putting two things together that are opposites from each other
- 10. A character, object, or scene that sets off another by contrast
