Across
- 2. A feeling of anxious uncertainty about the events in a literary work
- 4. When what is said opposite of what is meant
- 7. An exaggeration for effect
- 10. Spoken words between characters
- 13. When the narrator is a character in the story and uses the pronoun "I"
- 15. A series of events that leads a literary work to the climax
- 16. An object that stands for or represents something other than itself
- 17. When the opposite of what is expected takes place
- 20. The point of view where the narrator know everything that happens, including what characters are thinking
- 22. The use of words that imitate sounds
- 24. Introduction of setting, characters, and the basic situation at the beginning of a story
- 25. The writer's attitude towards the subject and characters
- 26. When a story's time sequence is interrupted to relate an event from an earlier time
- 28. A person or animal that takes part in the action of a story
- 29. Poetry that is characterized by its informality, permitting almost any usage of rhythm and having no rhyme
Down
- 1. Giving non-human or inanimate objects human characteristics
- 3. A comparison between two things without using like or as
- 5. The main character in a literary work
- 6. The feeling a piece of work creates in the reader
- 8. A reference to a famous person, place or thing
- 9. Repetition of beginning consonant sounds
- 11. Events that occur after the climax
- 12. The highest point of intensity or the turning point of a story
- 14. When the audience knows more than the characters or actors know
- 17. A comparison between two tings using like or as
- 18. The central idea of a story, or the general idea about life that is revealed throughout the story
- 19. Struggles between opposing forces
- 21. Giving the reader hints or clues as to what will happen later in a story
- 23. A poem that tells a story
- 27. The time and place in which a story takes place
