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Rhetorical game 2

Across
A short, simple narrative of an incident; often used for humorous effect or to make a point.
Ex. When the psychopath kills, he stabs other’s wrist, poisons other’s food, and clutches other’s neck.
Ex. Everyone should have a cat because they comfort people when they are stressed, and they have pretty fluffy furs that are so comfortable to touch; what is better is that they do not annoy people when they are busy.
Ex. I hide under my bed; he is coming closer and closer. I can hear the sound of blood dripping from his knife, “Da, da, da.” I don’t even dare to breath. The news said he had already killed twenty-eight girls. Am I going to be the twenty-ninth? There’s nothing I can do by now. It’s fine. Today I die.
Ex. Have you ever thought about why having a cat is beneficial to your life?
Ex. Emily Davison, an English suffragette, died because of a basilar skull fracture when the horse of King George V knocked her to the ground.
Ex. “It was not me!” yelled the suspect after the attorney charged him of hitting his girlfriend. He exclaimed, “I didn’t do it. It wasn’t me. It wasn't. It was not me!”
Ex. With this storm so big, I hope Noah has gotten all the animals on the ark.
Down
Independent clause followed by a series of subordinate constructions (phrases or clauses) that gather details about a person, place, event, or idea.
Ex. The psychopath said that helping a grandma to cross the road is none of his business.
JF Kenndy greeted the British Crown for the first time in 1961
Ex. The odiferous turkey Lincoln pardoned had snow white feathers, and it gobbled loudly as it waddled proudly after the president wherever he went in the White House.
The technique of repeating conjunctions in close succession.
Ex. The emotional implications and associations that a word may carry.
Ex. A figure of speech that substitutes one word or phase with a different but closely associated word or phrase.