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Elements of a Short Story

Across
A type of irony- when a character speaks lines that have a double meaning understood by the audience/reader, but not by the characters
Type of character- someone with several traits and is fully developed
Type of character- a figure that is easily recognized, is an exaggerated portrait of a certain type of character (ex. jock, cheerleader)
A clash between forces, people, ideas, or emotions to make the story interesting
An object that has other meanings beyond itself, may represent for other things
When a character resolves an internal conflict by experiencing a sudden insight/clear understanding about themselves or the world
Type of character- has only one or two distinct traits
The particular problem/conflict that the character confronts
Written/Paraphrased summary of the plot
The main character of the story
Comes after the climax, leads to the conclusion
Type of irony- when you say something but mean something else, often with insincerity/mockery
Beginning of the story where the setting/characters are introduced
A reference to a well-kown person/event/literature/mythology
Character that opposes the protagonist
A generalization about a person/group of people that involves prejudice
Down
When a character faces two desirable choices
Type of conflict- person vs self (often takes place in the mind of a character)
Use of irony to ridicule an idea/person/thing, often to provoke change
Point of view- narrator knows about all the characters
The outline of a short story
The time and place in which the story occurs
Type of irony- series of circumstances which turn out to be reverse of what was expected
When a character day-dreams about a time in their past, may reveal many facts/past events
A device used to make reader curious/anxious about the outcome that builds up to the climax
Series of events that develops the actions that occurred in the introduction (also where main conflict begins)
Conversations between characters, creates interest, develops plot and reveals character
A hint/clue of what will happen later without revealing information that could destroy interest
Type of character- someone who remains the same throughout the story
Type of character- a character who undergoes permanent change in some aspect of their character/personality
Type of conflict- problem that takes place between a character and an outside force (ex. person vs person, person vs nature)
Most intense/dramatic point of the conflict
The differences between characters/places/situations