Romeo and Juliet Vocabulary Cassidy

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Across
  1. 3. A literary technique, originally used in Greek tragedy, by which the full significance of a characters words or actions are cleat to the audience or reader although unknown to the character.
  2. 5. Mot returned or rewarded.
  3. 6. A remark of passage by a character in a play that is intended to be heard by the audience but unheard by the other character in the play.
  4. 8. A figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction.
  5. 10. Two lines of verse, usually in the same meter and joined by rhyme, that form a unit.
  6. 12. A thing regarded or representative or symbolic of something else, especially something abstract.
  7. 13. A poem in the form of a speech or narrative by an imagined person in which the speaker inadvertently reveals aspects of their character while despairing a particular situation or series of events.
  8. 14. A setback in a enterprise; a defect.
  9. 15. Be incompatible or at variance; clash
  10. 17. A play dealing with tragic events and having an unhappy ending especially one concerning the downfall of the main character.
  11. 19. A verse without rhyme, especially that which use iamba pentameter.
  12. 20. Defined as when a poem has lines ending with words that sound the same.
  13. 22. Be a warning or indication of a future event.
  14. 24. The formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named.
  15. 25. Make a joke exploiting the different possible meaning of a word.
  16. 26. Take part in a conversation or discussion to resolve a problem.
Down
  1. 1. A large organized group of singers, especially one that performs together with an orchestra or opera company.
  2. 2. A line of verse with five metrical feet each consisting of one short or unstressed syllable fallowed by one long or stressed syllable for example two households, both alike indignity.
  3. 4. The subject of a talk, a piece of writing, a person's thoughts, or on exhibition, a topic.
  4. 7. A poem of 14 lines using any number of formal rhyme schemes, in English typically have 10 syllables per line.
  5. 9. The ordered pattern of rhymes at the ends of the lines of a poem or verse.
  6. 11. Self-consciously suffering and has given himself up to the power of his mistress.
  7. 16. A figure of speech involving the compromise of one thing with another thing of affect kind used to make ascription more emphatic or vivid.
  8. 18. An event or action that leads to another event or situation.
  9. 21. A fanciful expression in writing or speech; an elaborate metaphor.
  10. 23. An act of specking one's thoughts aloud when by oneself or regardless of any hear eds, especially by a character in a play.