The most eye-catching part of an image is...
salient
The background is in the back; in the front is...
the foreground
Mr. Rooke is a snail.
Metaphor
Bam! Pow! Crash!
Onomatopoeia
Mr. Rooke's favourite animal.
Crow
Differences in an image (e.g. red and blue colours) are...
contrast
A line leading somewhere in an image is called a...
vector
Simile
This is a very, very, very easy question.
Repetition
Mr. Milne's favourite animal.
Echidna
Very strong differences in an image (like a bright moon against a dark sky) are...
juxtaposition
Where the 'camera' is placed (e.g. underneath a character) is called
perspective / point-of-view
'Go away!'
Imperative voice
A joke based on how a word sounds (e.g. at the restaurant the pelican got a huge BILL).
Pun
Mr. Turner's favourite animal.
Fishing cat
Colours representing something (like blue representing sadness) is called...
colour symbolism
An image being uneven on both sides is...
asymmetrical
Mr. Maguire very confidently said 'I am your teacher next year'.
High modality
Giving human qualities to something that isn't human ('the chair groaned').
Personification
Ms. Leeson's favourite animal.
Tiger
The mood and 'feel' of a setting (like an image full of rain and mist feeling spooky and miserable) is called...
atmosphere
An animal representing a larger idea (like a pig representing greed) is called...
animal symbolism
Mr. Hannell is the wisest teacher ever.
Hyperbole
Writing that is really easy to imagine in your head ('the water glistened as the sparkling sun shone over it').
Imagery
Mrs. Morrison's favourite animal.
Platypus