LA Terms 1
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LA Terms 1
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Ballad: passed down to generation to generation because many people did not know how to read or write; usually rhymes every other line.
biography: form of nonfiction prose written by an author about another person
epiphany: the sudden realization or insight in which a character recognizes a truth or previously unknown information
fable: short tale with a moral lesson
Fantasy: based in the style of folklore but is a more modern genre
Fiction: can include fables, fantasies, parables, tall tales, narrative poems, and dramas
ScienceFiction: a good example would be The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1885) by Robert Louis Stevenson
Historical: type of fiction which the people in the story must be realistically portrayed, and the setting for the story should be appropriate to the time period, and the facts are accurate
FigurativeLanguage: the use of this kind of language allows a writer to express thoughts and descriptions in vivid and imaginative ways
FigureofSpeech: Expressions that describe one thing in terms of another are called...
genre: classification category used to identify a specific type of literary work based on style, structure, or content
hyperbole: use of deliberate exaggeration for emphasis or effect
LiteralLanguage: means exactly what it appears to mean
Figurative: this type of language cannot be taken literally.
LiteraryStyle: author's distinctive use of grammar, vocabulary, figurative language, and sentence structure
Motif: a character, incident, or idea that is repeated in a literary work
Myth: These stories describe the adventures of humans, gods and goddesses, heroes and heroines, and antiheroes
Nonfiction: Works of this genre include autobiographies, biographies, histories, journals, and diaries that are based on facts or eyewitness accounts
parable: short, descriptive story that is used to describe a particular moral or belief
persona: narrator of a story
tall tale: humorous story that is exaggerated in an extreme manner
tragedy: literary work in which a hero or protagonist is destroyed by some flaw within his character or by forces that he or she cannot control
LA Terms 1
Across:3. | type of fiction which the people in the story must be realistically portrayed, and the setting for the story should be appropriate to the time period, and the facts are accurate | 4. | a character, incident, or idea that is repeated in a literary work | 6. | short, descriptive story that is used to describe a particular moral or belief | 8. | humorous story that is exaggerated in an extreme manner | 11. | a good example would be The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1885) by Robert Louis Stevenson | 12. | narrator of a story |
| 14. | classification category used to identify a specific type of literary work based on style, structure, or content | 15. | use of deliberate exaggeration for emphasis or effect | 18. | literary work in which a hero or protagonist is destroyed by some flaw within his character or by forces that he or she cannot control | 20. | this type of language cannot be taken literally. | 21. | Works of this genre include autobiographies, biographies, histories, journals, and diaries that are based on facts or eyewitness accounts |
| | Down:1. | short tale with a moral lesson | 2. | based in the style of folklore but is a more modern genre | 5. | Expressions that describe one thing in terms of another are called... | 7. | author's distinctive use of grammar, vocabulary, figurative language, and sentence structure | 9. | These stories describe the adventures of humans, gods and goddesses, heroes and heroines, and antiheroes |
| 10. | means exactly what it appears to mean | 13. | form of nonfiction prose written by an author about another person | 16. | can include fables, fantasies, parables, tall tales, narrative poems, and dramas | 17. | passed down to generation to generation because many people did not know how to read or write; usually rhymes every other line. | 19. | the sudden realization or insight in which a character recognizes a truth or previously unknown information |
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LA Terms 1
Across:3. | type of fiction which the people in the story must be realistically portrayed, and the setting for the story should be appropriate to the time period, and the facts are accurate | 4. | a character, incident, or idea that is repeated in a literary work | 6. | short, descriptive story that is used to describe a particular moral or belief | 8. | humorous story that is exaggerated in an extreme manner | 11. | a good example would be The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1885) by Robert Louis Stevenson | 12. | narrator of a story |
| 14. | classification category used to identify a specific type of literary work based on style, structure, or content | 15. | use of deliberate exaggeration for emphasis or effect | 18. | literary work in which a hero or protagonist is destroyed by some flaw within his character or by forces that he or she cannot control | 20. | this type of language cannot be taken literally. | 21. | Works of this genre include autobiographies, biographies, histories, journals, and diaries that are based on facts or eyewitness accounts |
| | Down:1. | short tale with a moral lesson | 2. | based in the style of folklore but is a more modern genre | 5. | Expressions that describe one thing in terms of another are called... | 7. | author's distinctive use of grammar, vocabulary, figurative language, and sentence structure | 9. | These stories describe the adventures of humans, gods and goddesses, heroes and heroines, and antiheroes |
| 10. | means exactly what it appears to mean | 13. | form of nonfiction prose written by an author about another person | 16. | can include fables, fantasies, parables, tall tales, narrative poems, and dramas | 17. | passed down to generation to generation because many people did not know how to read or write; usually rhymes every other line. | 19. | the sudden realization or insight in which a character recognizes a truth or previously unknown information |
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© 2013
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only