Sound in Poetry  BW: What is the difference between “Hush!” “Please be quiet!” and “Shut up!”?  Think about what these sayings imply.  Now, think about.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Writing about Sound in Poetry. Credit Adapted from Mary Olivers A Poetry Handbook.
Advertisements

TPCASTT (a way to Analyze Poetry)
POETRY BONKERRRRZZZZ  I was reading the dictionary. I thought it was a poem about everything. I was reading the dictionary. I thought it was a poem.
Learning intentions To recall and understand how to go about reading a poetry text. To be aware of the range of questions that might be asked about poetry.
By Robert Frost.  Alliteration: Repeating a consonant sound, usually at the beginning of the word.
Poetry Repetition, Alliteration, Rhyme. Repetition Repetition refers to words or phrases that are repeated Authors use repetition to: Draw attention to.
Form and Sound.
Success criteria To recognise poetry text and identify the subject, theme, structure and pattern of poems. To interpret poems, explaining how the poet.
Figurative Language: Words that Mean More than What They Say.
English 2 PreAP Poetry Unit. Objectives: The students will be able to…. …appreciate poetry as a genre …recognize and explain the significance of poetic.
Musical Devices “music” in poetry Similarity of sounds
Analysis of Poetic Devices in Nature Poems
Objective: Evaluate form and devices and annotate poetry to better understand a poem’s theme and poet’s vision or purpose.
Sound Devices Brought to you by powerpointpros.com.
Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”: An Analysis
MRS. RUDD LAKE HAZEL MIDDLE SCHOOL  LITERARY TERMS  EVIDENCE AND INFERENCE  INTERPRETING POETRY.
TPCISTT. T- Title  Ponder the title before reading the poem and jot down some predictions.
Bell Ringer 12/18  Please go to the shelf and get a red book.  Write your name on the inside cover.  Please put a book cover on it.  If you do, you.
Christmas Gifts. An odd shaped Christmas Tree Under this Christmas Tree are odd shaped gifts.
Our Reading Objectives I can say new words when one letter in a word is added, changed, or removed. I can say if a vowel has a long or short sound. I can.
Teacher-of-English.com This Room Poems from Different Cultures.
Quotation Punctuation Place quotation marks before and after the words that are being said. Place quotation marks before and after the words that are.
Poetry Handbook Definitions Alliteration The repetition of consonant sounds, usually at the beginnings of words or syllables. Example: over the cobbles.
Lesson 4.2.  Today in class, I will…  Analyze a variety of poems.  Demonstrate understanding of connotative diction to create tone in a written response.
WHAT MAKES A POEM.
Poetry.
Poetic Techniques How Writing Becomes Poetry. Alliteration The repeating of beginning consonant sounds ◦ Betsy’s Barbie doll baked on the big bureau by.
Warm Up Look at the word on the piece of paper that you selected. Imagine someone has just used that word to refer to you: “They just called me what?!”
“Mending Wall” was written and published by Robert Frost in 1914 in an influential collection of poems titled North of Boston.
6 Room Image Poem. In your mind, picture a place that you enjoy visiting, have been to on vacation, or a place that you go to for fun. Take a snapshot.
Complete this statement: Writers use figurative language and sound devices to make their poems or stories sound more _____________.
POETRY ANALYSIS Modern and Post-Modern Poetry. YOU DON’T HAVE TO COMPLETELY UNDERSTAND A POEM TO APPRECIATE IT! Many critics and experts in poetry don’t.
 Poetry Lesson Edgar Allan Poe: “The Raven” “Annabel Lee” Robert Frost: “Nothing Gold Can Stay” “Mending Wall” “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”
 Please get out your “Stopping by Woods” notes and questions. o Please define the following terms: Explicit & Implicit o What is the difference between.
Repetition, repetition, repetition. The action of repeating sounds, words, phrases, lines, or stanzas that have already been said or written. Used to.
Poetic Elements – Sound Devices
Reading As Writers POETRY. As effective readers, we need to: Read carefully and with understanding Be able to visualize (or picture) what we are reading.
WARM UP POEM Week 18. TYPE THE FOLLOWING TEXT. Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though; He will not see me stopping here.
Persuasion Lesson 24: Post-assessments of Literary Interpretation and Persuasive Writing.
LITERARY ANALYSIS #2 POETRY. POETRY ANALYSIS  Literary Analysis #2: Poetry is due on 10/24/12.
You Need Paper and Pen/Pencil Agenda: FSA Reading Test Schedule Analysis Process and Clues Figurative Language in Poetry FSA Poem Practice.
Poetry.
Poetry.
Poetry Are all poems the same? What makes poems different? What makes a poem a poem and not a story, report or list? What are the features of a poem?
- the use of words whose sounds suggest their meanings. Examples of onomatopoeia:  “The bang of a gun.”  “The hiss of a snake.”  “The buzz of a bee.”
GUIDELINES POET’S PURPOSE in writing and THEME the text deals withWHY has the poem been written? POETIC TECHNIQUES = literary conventions, how language.
We don't read and write poetry because it's cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race and the human race is filled with passion.
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening A poem by Robert Frost.
Poetry Unit Test Study Guide Terms. ALLITERATION Repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of words. Many tongue twisters have alliteration. Example:
How to Write Poetry. Tips For Writing Poems  Don’t be scared of a blank page. Inspiration for writing poems is limitless. Look at a blank page for its.
The Wonderful World of Poetry: Terms You Just Need to Know Powe Spring 2015.
Bellwork Define the word “mood”. Consider what the word might mean in relation to literature and poetry. Turn in “The Method” on the student poem from.
E LEMENTS OF P OETRY. Poetry is a literary form that combines the precise meaning of words with their emotional associations, sounds, and rhythms. Many.
Literary Terms in Poetry 1.
The Invention of Writing
POETRY Created by Educational Technology Network
English Literature paper 2…
Understanding Poetry Ms. Roby’s class 2011 Click here to continue
“Nothing Gold Can Stay”
Bellwork Place your paragraphs on “The Road Not Taken” and “Courage” on your desk. Exchange your “Courage” paragraph with an elbow partner and read your.
Literary Term Focus.
Part C: Rhetorical devices
Unit 1- Poetry.
Techniques and elements of Literature
ELEMENTS OF POETRY: THEME & IMAGERY.
Studying Poetry Genre Introduction.
Poetry Analysis HOMEWORK SESSION #1.
Home & Family How do our experiences with Home & family shape us?
Split a sheet of paper in half with the person next to you.
| KNOWLEDGE ORGANISER – Year 9 Dylan Thomas |
Presentation transcript:

Sound in Poetry  BW: What is the difference between “Hush!” “Please be quiet!” and “Shut up!”?  Think about what these sayings imply.  Now, think about tone.  Now, think about just how they sound.

A line in a poem A line in music A tapping on a wall What do all these different things have in common?

Onomatopoeia  Examples?  Dingdong  Bang Definition: Individual sounds-tied-to- sense

Sounds of the Alphabet  Liquid  L, m, n, r  Aspirate  C, f, g, h, j, s, x  Stronger than an aspirate  V, w, y, z  Mute  b, d, k, p, q, t, c, g

The vowels  The letters are separated into two: consonants and vowels  A vowel creates the perfect sound-- alone, how it is. A consonant cannot be properly uttered until it is connected to a vowel. “The woods are lovely, dark, and deep. “

Sounds of the Alphabet  Families of Sounds NOT Random sounds  Words not only have a definition, but there is a sense of something deeper; a feeling brought on by their sound.

A Rock or a Stone  On your construction paper: draw a rock; draw a stone.  Describe the difference in sound between rock and stone. Do you see it in your picture?

“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening –Robert Frost (Themes)  What are some possible themes for the poem?  One has to keep going despite the hardships that come with life.  Life can be beautiful, but dark at times, too; and there is no stopping it because one must persevere. How do the sounds of the poem contribute to these themes?

MEAL  Main Idea  Example  Analysis  Link Write a MEAL that conveys a theme in “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”. Your example should be evidence of sound from the poem.