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FSA Academic Vocabulary

Across
Emotions or values; The writer sways the audience's emotions using stories, vivid imagery, and inspirational quotes.
similar to a spoken conversation, may include slang, figures of speech, broken syntax, asides and so on.
based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions
the attitude a writer has toward the audience, a subject, or a character
not directly stated, you have to guess it
the feeling or atmosphere that a writer creates for the reader
the basic definition or dictionary meaning of a word
a question asked only for effect, because the answer is not expected; a question that has an obvious answer
Reason or logic; The writer uses logical, organized arguments by referencing studies, statistics, or logical analogies.
an educated guess, a logical conclusion
clearly and directly stated
to make a statement that expresses a personal view or interpretation and is open to challenge
Credibility or trust; The writer cites credible sources or establishes own credibility through professional tone or title.
Down
combine two or more ideas
when the words mean something other than their common or literal meaning
a recurring theme, subject or idea
choice of words; the actual words an author uses
characters that have different personality traits, change during the story and are similar to real people
depict (someone or something) in a work of art or literature.
complete, very carefully done
importance of something; why something matters
the ideas or feelings that a word suggests
the perspective from which a story is told
the plot goes back in time and refers to events that happened before the main time of the story
a written document, an image, a video, a speech, a work of art, etc.
impartial, based on facts and not influenced by personal feelings or opinions
proof; information that you use to prove your claim
the author's message or life lesson
a particular preference or point of view that is personal and may cause prejudice