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Poetic Devices
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Sound Devices Rhyme
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Rhyme: Single Rhyme Love, dove
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Double Rhyme Napping tapping
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Triple Rhyme Mournfully, scornfully
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Imperfect Rhyme Two words that look alike, but don’t sound alike:
Love, jove
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Internal Rhyme Occurs inside a line: to beat the heat
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Masculine Rhyme When the final syllables rhyme: Intent, content
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Feminine Rhyme When more than one syllable rhymes, but with no emphasis on the final syllable Weather, heather
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Other sound devices Assonance Onomatopoeia alliteration
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Assonance A resemblance of vowel sounds in words or syllables
O’ harp and altar of the fury fused
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Onomatopoeia When a word sounds like its meaning:
Drip, whisper, hiss, hoot, murmur, crunch, crackle
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Alliteration Words beginning with same consonant sound
In a summer season when soft was the son
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Picture Devices: Imagery
Metaphor Simile Personification Allusion Hyperbole Understatement Irony Antithesis Synecdoche Metonymy
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Metaphor Two unlike things directly compared
The river is a snake which coils on itself
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Simile Two unlike things compared using “like” or “as”
The man paced like a hungry lion
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Personification Giving human qualities to things
The trees danced in the breeze
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Allusion Referring metaphorically to persons, places or things from literature, history, religion or mythology With Herculean strength
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Hyperbole Saying more than is true
He played guitar until he wore his fingers to the bone
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Understatement Saying less than is true
Losing his job meant he could sleep late
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You may be smoking a bit too much
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Irony Saying the opposite of what is true, or when the intended meaning is different from the actual meaning War is kind
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IRONY!
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Antithesis Contrasts for effect for emphasis
Deserts are dry, oceans are wet
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Synecdoche Using parts for the whole “all hands on deck”
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Metonymy Substituting one word for another
The scales of justice are fair
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Form and Structure Stanza Forms
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Rhyme scheme: indicated by a capital letters indicating rhyming words: AABB, ABAB, ABCB
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Names for stanzas: Couplet: two rhyming lines Tercet: three
Quatrain: 4 Quintet: 5 Sestet: 6 (often 3 sets of couplets) Octave: 8
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Sonnet: 14 line stanza Shakespearean: 3 quatrains and a rhyming couplet ABAB CDCD, EFEF GG
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