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Eng 200 vocab Crossword
Down
:
1) A fictional CHARACTER telling the story whose knowledge or judgement about events and other characters is so flawed or so limited as to make him or her a misleading guide to the reader.
2) The sequemce of events in a short story or a play and their relation to one another.
4) A term referring to the specific manner chosen by the author to create a sotry or poem.
7) The telling of a story or drama in a manner that is faithful the thre reader's experience of real life, limiting events in the PLOT to things that might actually exist.
9) An example of siscourse designed to represent a connected succession of events or happenings, usually involving CHARACTERS, PLOT, and SETTING.
11) Occurs when the reader knows more about a situation than the imaginary characters.
12) Complex, full, described in detail.
13) The tell of a story by a person who was involved in or directly observed the action narrated. "I"
14) The author's choice of a narrator for the story to shape what the reader knows and how the reader feels about the events of a story.
16) A writer's choice of language - including words, phrases, and sentence structure. And important element of STYLE.
17) The introduction of specific words into a NARRATIVE to suggest or anticipate later events that are central to the ACTION and its RESOLUTION.
18) Building up to climax.
19) The conclusion of a plot's conflicts and complications.
20) The presentation of the background information, usually early in a sotry, that a reader or a theortrical audience must be aware of, especially about situations that exist and events that have occurred before the ACTION of a NARRATIVE begins.
22) A word (or person, object, image, or event) that evokes a range of additional meanings that are usually more abstract than its literal significance.
23) Characters who are oversimplified and gerneralized into stock types in a literary work, whose thoughts and actions are easily predictable because they are used so frequentlythat they have become conventional.
24) Any person who plays a part in a narrative work.
28) A figure of speech that occurs when the speaker says one thing but means the opposite, (Sarcasm).
29) The characters, images, and themes that symbolically embody universal human meanings and experiences.
30) A generalization about the meaning of a story, poem, or play.
35) A type of literart work, such as a SHORT STORY, novel, essay, play, or poem.
37) The way the authors convey their unstated attitudes toward their subjects as revealed in their literary STYLE.
Across
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3) Often contradictory and changing in some way during the story.
5) Literally "all-knowingness"; the ability of an author or narrator to tell the reader directly about any events that have occured, are occuring, or will occur in the PLOT of a story, and about the thoughts and feelings of any CHARACTER.
6) Simple and one-dimensional characters.
8) The act of explaining or interpreting the meaning of a text.
10) A way of telling a story using third person " he" or "she," in which the narrator is a nonparticipant in the sotry.
15) The final resolution of the intricacies of a plot; place in plot this occures; outcome or resolution of a doubtful series of occurences.
21) Unsuprisingand unchanging characters.
25) The main CHARACTER of a narrative, who engages the reader's interest and empathy.
26) The distinctive and recognizable way an author uses language to create a work of literature.
27) The events of a NARRATIVE that follow the CLIMAX and resolve the conflict before the story is brought to its conclusion.
31) Minor PLOT, often involving one or more secondary CHARACTERS, that may add a complication to the ACTION of a SHORT STORY or DRAMA. May reinforce the major plot or provide enlightening contrast or a relief from tension.
32) A NARRATIVE usually restricted to a single meaning or general truth, in which characters, places, things, and events thus often function as SYMBOLS of the concepts or ideas reffered to.
33) The physical details of the place, the time, and the social context that influence the actions of the CHARACTERS. -Evokes mood or atmosphere.
34) The character in a short story or play who is in real or imagined opposition to the PROTAGONIST.
36) A recital of events, especially in chronological order, as the story narrated in a poem or the exposition in a drama.
38) The turning point of point of highest interest in a narrative; the point at which the most important part of the ACTION takes place and the final outcome or RESOLUTION of teh PLOT becomes inevitable.
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