Across
- 3. Where the characters of a fictional story are attempting to resolve the major conflict, but it continues to build and minor conflicts occur.
- 4. The act of an audience learning about characters in a fictional work.
- 7. A metaphor in which inanimate objects are assigned human traits.
- 8. Comparing two things by using like or as.
- 10. A character that goes through a significant change.
- 12. A visual representation of a fictional plot.
- 15. A prevailing or prominent message or concept which spans a literary work.
- 16. Where the audience sees what will come of the rest of the story after the highest point of tension.
- 19. The first point of conflict in a fictional story.
Down
- 1. The act of an audience learning about a character through the thoughts and actions they witness from a character.
- 2. Comparing two things without using like or as
- 5. The highest point of tension in a fictional story; what the plot has been leading towards the whole time.
- 6. The act of specifically listing character traits for an audience to learn about specific characters.
- 7. The character which the story follows.
- 9. A spoken or written account; a story.
- 11. A struggle between two opposing forces.
- 13. The character which directly opposes the protagonist
- 14. The central theme of (Title of story) by (author's name) is....
- 17. The loose ends of a story are tied up, the audience knows what is going to happen to characters and all questions about the plot are answered.
- 18. The beginning part of a fictional plot where the audience learns important information about the characters, setting etc.
