Across
- 2. A consistent meter but no rhyme scheme.
- 4. Word choice or literary devices used to help with the art of persuasion.
- 6. The weakness of the Tragic hero that brings the downfall.
- 10. A group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem.
- 11. Rhetoric that appeals to the feelings or emotions of the audience.
- 13. A play that ends with the downfall of the tragic hero.
- 14. Rhetoric that appeals to the ethics or credibility of the speaker.
- 15. The art of persuasion.
- 16. Words are spoken usually a short amount not meant to be heard by the audience.
- 18. A type of poem with 14 lines and a specific rhyme scheme.
- 19. Two lines of poetry that are next to each other and have end rhyme.
- 21. Rhetoric that appeals to facts and logic of the subject matter.
- 22. Speech/conversation between two or more characters.
Down
- 1. When the audience knows something the characters do not.
- 3. No consistent pattern of rhyme or meter.
- 5. A character that’s purpose is to contrast another character.
- 7. a performance/story told live.
- 8. The meter used in Shakespeares sonnets.
- 9. A play that is humorous and entertaining.
- 12. A great hero/character that is destined for downfall.
- 17. When the opposite of what is expected occurs.
- 18. Long speech expressing the thoughts of a character alone on stage.
- 20. Speech given by one character.
