Across
- 4. type of irony when the outcome of a situation is the opposite of what you would expect
- 5. builds tension and develops the conflict
- 7. narrator knows the thoughts and feelings of all characters
- 9. type of irony when the audience knows something that the characters do not, creating tension or humor
- 11. follows the climax and shows the consequences of the climax
- 14. POV where the narrator is a character in the story, "I, me, my"
- 15. the author's attitude toward the story, shaping the reader's perception
- 16. narrator addresses reader directly, "you"
Down
- 1. ties up loose ends and concludes the story
- 2. introduces the setting, characters, and background information
- 3. the turning point of the story, where the main conflict reaches its peak
- 6. narrator reports only what can be observed
- 8. type of irony when character says one thing but means another, often sarcastically
- 10. the emotional atmosphere of a story, influencing how readers feel
- 12. narrator is outside the story but knows the thoughts and feelings of one character
- 13. the central problem/struggle the main character faces
