Across
- 1. A remark or passage by a character in a play that is intended to be heard by the audience but other people in the play do not hear
- 4. A play dealing with the tragic events or an unhappy event especially one concerning the downfall of the main character
- 6. When a word uses the sound that it is related to
- 9. When one person is written in just to contrast with another
- 13. The subject of talk a piece of writing a persons thoughts and exhibition a topic
- 14. A figure of speech which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction
- 15. A verse without rhyme especially that which uses iambic pentameter
- 16. A line or verse with five metrical feet each constant at one short (or unstressed) suitable followed by one long (or stressed) syllabe
- 17. An act of speaking ones thoughts aloud by ones self or regardless of any hearers especially by a character in a play
- 19. A fanciful expression in written or speech; on elaborate metaphor
- 21. Loving someone who doesn't love you back
- 23. When a poem ends in words that sound the same
- 24. The ordered pattern of rhymes of the end or lines of a poem or verse
- 25. A large group of people who say the same things at the same time
- 26. Two lines of a verse, usually in the same meter and join a rhyme that forms a unit
Down
- 2. A poem of 14 lines using any number at formal rhyme schemes, in English typically having 10 syllables per line
- 3. A poem in the form of a speech or narrative by an imagine person, in which the speaker monvertly reveals aspects at their character while describing a particular situation or series of events
- 5. A joke exploring the different possible meanings of a word or the fact that there are words that sound alike but have different meanings
- 7. A figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action that it is not applicable
- 8. A separate introductory section of literacy
- 10. A figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind used to make a description more emphatic or vivid
- 11. Melodramatic self consciously suffering and has risen up
- 12. The expression of ones meaning by body language that normally signifies the opposite typically a humans or emphatically effect
- 18. Conversation between two or more people as a feature in a book play or movie
- 20. A series disagreement or argument typically a protracted one
- 22. Being warned or indicated to the future events
