Poetic elements

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