Vocabulary Extra Credit

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Across
  1. 2. Regarding a statement, argument, or source - it is truthful in respect to the information presented.
  2. 7. A writing technique in which something can have more than one meaning or may be deliberately unclear.
  3. 8. The writer's position or viewpoint in an argumentative essay.
  4. 10. A way of thinking that values feelings, intuition, and imagination over reason and logic.
  5. 11. A revival of art and literature (and music) in society. It effects the culture and ideas on a large scale.
  6. 14. The art of persuasive speaking or writing, especially using figures of speech; the language people use to convince you to believe their side: Logos – Logic; Ethos – Ethics; Pathos – Emotions
  7. 15. A situation of severe trial, or in which different elements interact, leading to the creation of something new.
  8. 16. Reasoning based on illogical, incorrect, or inaccurate information.
  9. 18. A short story about a real incident or person, often told to make a point.
  10. 19. The set of rules that determines the arrangement of words in a sentence.
Down
  1. 1. A type of irony in which a character or the reader expects one thing to happen but something else actually does.
  2. 3. A container in which substances maybe melted or subjected to very high temperatures.
  3. 4. A writer's or speaker's choice of words. It includes both vocabulary (individual words) and syntax (the order or arrangement of words).
  4. 5. A story, poem, or picture that can reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one. It is the surface story with a deeper story that represents something else.
  5. 6. A newspaper (or other form of media) article written by or on behalf of an editor that gives and opinion on an important issue.
  6. 9. A type of literature that includes flawed characters, bizarre situations, violent events, and insane elements.
  7. 11. The pattern of rhymes in a poem in comparing the last words in each line.
  8. 12. A phrase or expression whose meaning is different than the meaning of the individual words.
  9. 13. Poems that are song-like and focus on personal emotions and the author’s state of mind.
  10. 17. The opposing side's viewpoint, usually in contrast to the writer's claim.