Romeo and Juliet is told in second person.
Bonus 100 points: What point-of-view is it told in?
Satire is the use of humour, irony, sarcasm, or ridicule to _____________ something.
criticize
Foreshadowing
Hinting at future or subsequent events to come to build tension in a narrative.
The interpretation of a nonhuman animal, event, or object as embodying human qualities or characteristics.
Anthropomorphism
Sets the scene for the story, introduces characters & place and hooks the reader.
Exposition/Introduction
This is alliteration: The tree trunk twisted toward the tire swing.
Metaphor: a comparison of two ideas, events, objects, or people that do not use _____ or _____.
"like" or "as"
Imagery
A compilation of sensory details that enable the reader to visualize the event.
The general feeling the speaker evokes in the reader through the atmosphere, descriptions, and other features.
Mood
The story starts to build, and we learn more about the conflict and characters.
Rising Action
Verbal Irony refers to speech that conveys the opposite of its literal meaning.
True.
Symbolism: Something used to __________ a larger concept or idea.
represent
Elegy
A poem expressing grief over a death.
A figure of speech that is indecipherable based on the words alone. (example: “Don’t cut any corners”)
Idiom
We start to understand what is going to happen with the conflict of the story and how it might be resolved.
Climax
This is an example of __________________.
Dramatic Irony
Personification: Lending descriptions generally applied to ____________ to__________.
"human beings" "nonhumans"
Analogy
A parallel between contrasting ideas, people, things, or events that is more elaborate than a metaphor or simile.
An informal piece of dialogue or turn of phrase used in everyday conversation.
Colloquialism
Untangling the plot: the last bits of information are provided to make sense of the story.
Resolution.
Juxtaposition refers to ideas, people, images, or objects placed next to one another to highlight the similarities.
False. "...to highlight the differences."
Epiphany: A moment of sudden ________________ by a character.
realization
Anachronism
An intentional or unintentional error in chronology or a timeline.
The interpretation of a nonhuman animal, event, or object as embodying human qualities or characteristics.
Anthropomorphism
Sets the scene for the story, introduces characters & place and hooks the reader.
Exposition/Introduction