Across
- 2. What you feel using your skin (soft, rough, hot, cold).
- 3. A word that describes or gives more information about a noun (e.g., big, happy, blue).
- 6. The beginning of a piece of writing that introduces the topic and grabs the reader’s attention.
- 7. What you detect using your ears; sounds around you.
- 11. A way to organize a body paragraph in persuasive writing.
- 14. An appeal to credibility; convincing the reader by showing that the writer is trustworthy or knowledgeable.
- 15. A word that connects words or groups of words (e.g., and, but, because).
- 16. A word that shows an action or a state of being (e.g., run, is, think).
Down
- 1. What you experience when you use your tongue (sweet, sour, salty, bitter).
- 4. The final part of a piece of writing that wraps up the ideas and restates the main point.
- 5. An appeal to emotions; using feelings like happiness, fear, or sadness to persuade the reader.
- 8. A word that describes a verb, often telling how, when, or where something happens (often ends in -ly).
- 9. What you see using your eyes.
- 10. An appeal to logic; using facts, statistics, and clear reasoning to persuade the reader.
- 12. A word that names a person, place, thing, or idea.
- 13. What you sense using your nose.
