Across
- 3. Sometimes, an audience connects with your design in ways they don't even realize.
- 6. The main name of the presentation, just like a book's cover.
- 7. How you arrange items so that things that belong together are close to each other.
- 8. The words that you read on the slide.
- 10. The part of the slide that is behind all of the words and pictures.
- 12. Using the same fonts, colors, or shapes throughout your presentation for a consistent look.
- 16. Anything you can see on a slide, from a picture to a graph.
- 18. Making sure all the elements on a slide are lined up neatly.
- 19. Pictures, photos, or diagrams that help tell your story.
- 20. A design that is boring or hard to read because the elements are too similar.
Down
- 1. The parts of the slide that you want people to focus on the most.
- 2. A list of points, each marked by a small dot or symbol.
- 4. A design that is bold and easy to understand because of its clear differences.
- 5. When you move something slightly away from the center to make it look more interesting.
- 9. A ready-to-go design that you can fill with your own information.
- 11. Making one element stand out by making it very different from the elements around it, like using a light color on a dark background.
- 13. A design trick that involves placing important items along imaginary lines that divide the slide into nine parts.
- 14. The main subject or topic of your talk.
- 15. Creating a simple, clean look that is easy to understand.
- 17. The empty areas on a slide that let your content breathe.
