Across
- 2. promptly, soon
- 3. joyful; invigorating
- 7. compliment, glorify
- 8. Irony the audience or reader knows more about a characters situation than the character does and knows that the character’s understanding is incorrect.
- 10. money-lender
- 12. horrifying, shocking acts
- 13. agony, depression, grief
- 14. threatening, ominous
- 19. relative
- 21. two
- 23. brawl
- 24. the use of hints or clues in a story to suggest action that is to come; foreshadowing is frequently used to create interest and build suspense.
- 26. full of pity, empathy or compassion
- 27. the person, usually a minor character, in whom the main character confides.
- 29. face
- 30. the act of calling a superior for help
- 33. couriers, messengers
- 35. inquired, questioned
- 37. passionate, loving
- 38. vindictive, wicked
- 39. falsehoods
Down
- 1. carriage, transportation
- 4. affliction, injury, harm
- 5. worship
- 6. mud
- 7. fooled, seduced
- 8. destructive, harmful potion
- 9. scolds, reprimands
- 11. an object, person, or place that has a meaning in itself and that also stands for something larger than itself, usually an idea or concept; some concrete thing tht represents an abstraction.
- 12. rob, ransack, raid
- 13. relevant, pertinent
- 15. elaborate, pretentious
- 16. detest, disgust
- 17. strife, rivalry
- 18. gallants, cavaliers, suitors
- 20. hurt, injure
- 22. words spoken by an actor in such a way that they are heard by the audience but supposedly not by the other actors; these words usually represent the inner thoughts of the speaker.
- 24. fabricate, act
- 25. take flight and puncture like an arrow
- 28. enemy, nemesis
- 31. a reference to a person, place, poem, book, event, etc. that is not part of the story; the author generally expects the reader to recognize the allusion and be familiar with its source.
- 32. disturbed, troubled
- 34. monologue in which a character reveals thoughts to the audience, usually while alone onstage.
- 36. piece of men’s clothing
