Across
- 1. The main character of the story.
- 6. The person who opposes the protagonist.
- 9. The struggle of two forces within a story.
- 10. A figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance, as in “A mighty fortress is our God.”
- 11. These characters do not change within the story. They remain the same.
- 13. These characters are stereotyped and shallow. They only have a few traits.
- 14. The place where the story takes place.
Down
- 2. These types of characters are convincing true to life, have differences and contradictory personality traits.
- 3. The central idea or message of the story.
- 4. These types of characters undergo development in a story.
- 5. The high point of the story.
- 7. The beginning of the story.
- 8. The literary element that describes the structure of a story. It shows arrangement of events and actions within a story.
- 11. A figure of speech in which two unlike things are explicitly compared, as in “she is like a rose.”
- 12. The people (or animals, things etc. presented as people) appearing in a literary work.
- 13. The type of narration that gives a personal perspective. It usually uses "I".
- 15. This type of narration is told from an outside perspective. It is as if the narrator is watching the events unfold, but is separate from them.
