Poetry p. 118.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Poetry Figures of Speech- Tools that help to create images in a reader’s mind to help him understand a person or an idea Devices of Sound- Language tools.
Advertisements

BELL WORK: 1. Put homework in planner. metaphor sheet
Figurative Langage.
Key Academic Vocabulary
Idiom Dictionary Isabelle Evans Gwin Oaks Elementary Media Festival 2007.
Figurative Language How can I identify and interpret figurative language?
Figurative Language & Literary Devices HOME Click here to explore examples of Figurative Language & Literary Devices. Figurative language – words are used.
Free-Verse Poetry. What is Free-Verse? ◊ A definition: Verse composed of variable, usually unrhymed lines having no fixed metrical pattern ◊First used.
Elements of Poetry What is poetry?.
1) Poetry is a major type of literature. 2) There is no single, unique characteristic that all poems share. 3) Poetry does not always have to rhyme or.
Line: the basic unit of a poem Stanza: a collection of lines in a poem
Terms. Poetry  a type of literature in which ideas and feelings are expressed in compact, imaginative, and often musical language. Written in lines,
Poetry -One of the major types of literature, the others being fiction, non-fiction, folk tales, and drama.
MRS. ELIAS 2014 Poetic Terms and Figurative Language.
Poetry Investigation Unit Put Your Strengths to Work… And Discover Poetry!
POETRY: an imaginative expression of ideas and emotions.
Poetry JEOPARDY.
POETRY: SOUNDS AND IDEAS. The Sound of Poetry: RHYME RHYME: the repetition of sounds. When you read a poem, you can use letters to keep track of each.
Free-Verse Poetry. What is Free-Verse? ◊ A definition: Verse composed of variable, usually unrhymed lines having no fixed metrical pattern ◊First used.
Vocabulary. Figurative Language DEF: language that communicates ideas beyond the ordinary or literal meaning of words. SYN: Figures of speech EX: Simile,
Denotation the literal meaning of a word Example: Home: where you live.
Poetry This Power Point will change every 2 minutes. If you miss something, it will cycle through again. Just keep going! Just keep going!
Go Figure! Recognizing Figurative Language The opposite of literal language is figurative language. Figurative language is language that means more than.
POETRY FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. Poems are divided into LINES and then are grouped into STANZAS. Stanzas: verses in poetry.
POETRY.
MORE Poetry Techniques!. Imagery ◊The use of vivid or figurative language to represent objects, actions, or ideas ◊Using sensory language to create mental.
Poetry and Figurative Language Terms We need a way to talk about poetry! (and sound smart doing it…) Each day we review terms, add the definitions to the.
Poetry English Language Arts 9.
Jeopardy Definitions Definitions 2Definitions 3Examples Misc. Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Figurative Language Figurative Language. Literal vs. Figurative Language Literal Language – You say exactly what you mean. You make no comparison, and.
Elements of Poetry. Alliteration  Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings of words in lines of poetry. Example: “The angels,
Vocabulary Game Amy Dent, TIS April 2006 Amy Dent, TIS April 2006 Let’s Play!!
the literal meaning of a word
  The dictionary definition of a word  Example: Ornery- stubborn (adj.) The child was acting ornery and did not want to pick up his toys. Denotation.
Literary Terms and Definitions
Simile —a comparison that says that one thing is like another; a simile contains the word “like” or “as.”
Literary Terms You Should Know In your R/WJ, using the above title, write each term, its definition and one example.
Poetry Language that is rhythmic, shortened, uses figures of speech and imagery to appeal to emotion and imagination.
Introduction to Prose and Poetry A poem “begins in delight and ends in wisdom”. -Robert Frost.
1  A grouping of lines in poetry 1. stanza  A grouping of lines in poetry.
Poetry is a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged to create a certain effect. It is language in its most condensed form. Poets use.
Literary Terms. ALLITERATION ■ alliteration- the repetition of the same or similar consonant sounds in words that are close together ■ Example: Six snakes.
StructureFigurative Language Writing StyleOther Elements Elements of Poetry.
POETRY An introduction:. Key Elements of Poetry Form and Structure Sound Imagery Figurative Language Form and Structure.
Figurative Language Presentation
Poetry, Figurative Language, and Sound Devices
Presentation on Idiom Dictionary
E. Tate English Foundations
Poetry Terms Know these words!.
Figurative language.
Figurative Language Terms
Free-Verse Poetry.
Free-Verse Poetry.
Poetry Terms Ms. Bell ELA.
Poetry Vocabulary.
Figurative Language Figuring it Out.
POETRY: an imaginative expression of ideas and emotions
Isabelle Evans Gwin Oaks Elementary Media Festival 2007
Figurative Language.
Poetry Terms.
Isabelle Evans Gwin Oaks Elementary Media Festival 2007
Figurative Language Grade 6
Free-Verse Poetry.
E. Tate English Foundations
Figurative Language.
Figurative Language.
Figurative Language The Old Man and the Sea.
Isabelle Evans Gwin Oaks Elementary Media Festival 2007
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE.
POETRY Academic Vocabulary.
Presentation transcript:

Poetry p. 118

Elements of Poetry Lines: rows of words poems are written in. POEM (p. 124) I loved my friend. He went away from me. There’s nothing more to say. The poem ends, Soft as it began – – Langston Hughes

2. Stanzas: lines that are grouped together SUNDAYS (p. 129) For lunch Dad wore a white shirt with cuffs stiff as the ace of spades, knit pants, and loafers. After lunch we walked to the park as he rubbed the baseball with hands as tough and smooth as the underside of a tortoise. At the backstop, as slowly as bread rising, he rolled up his sleeves before hitting fly balls that seemed to skip off the sun before landing still warm in my mitt. - Paul B. Janeczko

3. Rhyme: matching end sounds The Pasture (p. 125) I’m going out to clean the pasture spring; I’ll only stop to rake the leaves away (And wait to watch the water clear, I may) I sha’n’t be gone long. – You come too. I’m going out to fetch the little calf That’s standing by the mother. It’s so young It totters when she licks it with her tongue.

4. Meter: a pattern of rhythm in a poem. 5. Rhythm: patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables (beats) – the SOUND of the lines of poetry when they are read Twinkle, twinkle, little star, How I wonder what you are.

6. repetition: repeated words or lines Family Photo (p. 133) One last picture And in the middle before we head off Grandma and Grandpa in different directions. who started all this. One last group shot of We’re ripples in a pond all of us, smirking, spreading out with rabbit ears. from a stone they threw. Three generations, - Ralph Fletcher kids on shoulders, a baby cousin on my lap.

7. alliteration: the repetitions of initial sounds in the words of a line of poetry. Examples: Lady luck Sound of Silence Bouncing baby boy

Practice alliteration Last names ending in A-M: Write a short description of a small child eating a melting ice cream cone, using alliteration. Last names ending in N-Z: Write a short description of a bull rider getting ready to come out of the chute, using alliteration.

8. imagery: language that creates word pictures. Example: Tiny paw prints in the wet sand Child Rest – p. 132 “Her red and yellow flower blossoms / beadwork complete”

Practice imagery You have thirty seconds to view the picture on the following slide. Then, use imagery to re-create the scene in your own free-verse poem.

9. Sensory language: words that describe how things look, smell, feel, taste, and sound. Example: Good Hot Dogs – p. 121 “splash on / … Yellow mustard and onions” “Little burnt tips/ Of French fries”

10. Figurative language: imaginative comparisons between unlike things 11. metaphor: compares two unlike things EX: icicles were dripping fangs 12. simile: compares two unlike things using like or as. EX: a voice as calm as moonlight 13. personification: gives human qualities to something not alive or human EX: breezes danced playfully

14. Onomatopoeia: a word in which the sound of the words gives the meaning of the word EX: buzz, hiss 15. irony: the use of a word or phrase to convey the opposite of its literal meaning. The difference between what is expected to happen and what really happens. Generally used for humorous or emphatic effect. EX: From:For Annie, By Edgar Allan Poe Thank Heaven! the crisis, The danger is past, And the lingering illness Is over at last, And the fever called "Living" Is conquered at last.

Practice onomatopoeia A poem titled “When Carly Eats Spaghetti” is on the following slide. As you read it, write down words that are examples of onomatopoeia.

“When Carly Eats Spaghetti” She chomps and gobbles and slurps, The spaghetti disappears with a whoosh Sauce slapping and smacking Round her chops. She scrapes the toast round the plate Crunching, grinding every mouthful. She burps, gurgles and leaves the table!

16. symbolism: anything that signifies of stands for something else 16. symbolism: anything that signifies of stands for something else. Usually that something is concrete (an object). 17. hyperbole: a big lie or exaggeration. It puts a picture into the “reader’s” mind. EX: I'd give my whole fortune for a bowl of bean soup. 18. idiom: a figure of speech that does not make sense if taken literally. EX: a dime a dozen, a picture paints a thousand words, a piece of cake, all bark and no bite, you’re barking up the wrong tree, a drop in the bucket, go the extra mile, great minds think alike

Idiom Dictionary

What is an idiom? An idiom is an expression whose meaning cannot be understood based on the definition of its constitutional elements

He spilled the beans He told the secret

Get off my back! Leave me alone!

We were laughing very hard! We were in stitches! We were laughing very hard!

He kicked the bucket! He died

Go fly a kite! Go away!

She was dressed to kill She was dressed in her finest clothing

I’m at the end of my rope! I am so-o-o frustrated!

You have to bite the bullet You need to put up with this difficult situation

Teachers always stick to their guns Teachers never change their opinions

Have you heard about that new TV? Money talks Have you heard about that new TV? Money influences a lot of people.

So I hope you enjoyed my idiom presentation because I… bent over backwards to do it for you!

19. allusion: an implied or indirect reference in literature to a familiar person, place, or event. This can be real or imaginary and may refer to anything, including paintings, opera, folk lore, mythical figures, or religious manuscripts. The reference can be direct or may be inferred, and can broaden the reader’s understanding. EX: a “I was surprised his nose was not growing like Pinocchio’s.” This refers to the story of Pinocchio, where his nose grew whenever he told a lie. It is from The Adventures of Pinocchio, written by Carlo Collodi.

Complete PB p. 93