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Twelve Angry Men Drama and Legal Terms

Across
To find the defendant guilty of the crime.
Planned or plotted in advance.
A contrast or discrepancy between expectation and reality, or between what is expected and what actually happens.
When the audience or reader knows information the characters do not.
A play written for television.
A character’s comment that is directed to the audience or another character but is not heard by any other characters on the stage.
Does not come directly from an eyewitness or participant and requires some reasoning to prove a fact.
A smaller unit of drama that often indicates a change in location or time.
The district attorney who tries to prove that the defendant is guilty.
When the jurors cannot agree on a verdict; requires a retrial.
To consider or discuss carefully.
The final decision made by the jury.
Down
A drama's high point of interest or suspense that causes the shift from rising action to falling action.
Does not come directly from an eyewitness or participant and requires some reasoning to prove a fact.
When the grand jury decides that there is probable cause to charge the defendant with a crime.
A story told mainly through the words and actions of characters.
To find the defendant innocent.
A major unit within a drama or a play.
An introductory section of a speech, play, or other literary work.
A work of literature that results in a catastrophe or major downfall (normally death) for the main character.
An attribute/defect of the tragic hero that ultimately leads to their demise.
The killing of one person by another.
States that a person cannot be tried twice for the same crime.
A long speech given by a character in a literary work, especially a drama.
The main character who suffers a downfall.
To question a witness by the opposing counsel.
A person says one thing and means another.
A long speech by a character who is alone on stage (or is under the impression of being alone).
A conversation between two or more characters.
The probable reason someone committed a crime.