Across
- 2. When an author uses a word or phrase to stimulate the reader’s memory of one or more of the five senses.
- 6. The implied attitude of a writer toward the subject and characters of a work.
- 8. The use of words that sound like what they mean.
- 14. The matching of final vowel or consonant sounds in two or more words
- 16. Language that goes beyond the literal meaning of words to create new effects or fresh insights into a subject.
- 18. A rhyme that occurs within one line of poetry.
- 19. How the piece of writing makes the reader feel.
Down
- 1. A reference to a well known person, place, event, literary work or work of art--often in a piece of writing.
- 3. A comparison between two unlike things without using like or as.
- 4. The recurrence of stressed and unstressed syllables in lines of verse.
- 5. Giving inanimate objects or abstract concepts living or human like qualities.
- 6. The lesson or moral in a piece of written work.
- 7. The author’s presence in a piece of literature whether in first, second, or third person.
- 9. Poetry without a regular pattern of meter, rhyme, or form.
- 10. An object or action in a literary work that means more than itself, that stands for something beyond itself.
- 11. Writing organized into sentences and paragraphs that is not poetry.
- 12. The repetition of the initial consonant sound of words within a phrase or sentence.
- 13. A figure of speech involving a comparison between two unlike things using like or as.
- 15. A major subdivision in a poem
- 17. Rhyming words that are at the ends of their respective lines—what we typically think of as normal rhyme.
