Across
- 2. A statement that seems to contradict itself, but actually contains a complex truth.
- 6. Giving human characteristics to non-living things.
- 8. The narrator is not a character in the story and knows the thoughts and feelings of all characters.
- 11. The point that a writer is trying to make about the topic.
- 13. The narrator is not a character in the story and only knows the thoughts and feelings of one character.
- 14. A comparison between two things, without using like or as.
- 15. The narrator is a person in the story, telling the story from their own point of view.
- 16. An extreme exaggeration that is not meant to be taken literally.
- 17. Refers to who is telling a story.
- 18. When actions or events have the opposite result from what is expected or what is intended.
- 19. When the use of words mean something different from what a person actually says.
Down
- 1. When the audience knows more about the situation and conflict than the leading characters.
- 3. The use of an object, person, situation, or word to represent something else.
- 4. A reference to a well known person, place, or thing.
- 5. Identification with, or sense of belonging to, a particular group based on various cultural categories, including nationality, ethnicity, race, gender, and religion.
- 7. The narrator is talking to you, the reader.
- 9. A person's outlook or view on events, characters, and the world.
- 10. Sayings not meant to be taken literally.
- 12. A comparison between two things, using like or as.
