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Prose Words Phrases Sentences Paragraphs Chapters Prose Words Phrases Sentences Paragraphs Chapters Poetry Syllables Feet Lines Stanzas Cantos Poetry Syllables Feet Lines Stanzas Cantos Basically, poetry is shorter, more condensed, and in a different physical form. This may help you to visualize the basic differences:
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The iamb ˘ ′ The trochee ′ ˘ The anapest ˘ ˘ ′ The dactyl ′ ˘ ˘ The spondee ′ ′ (tŏ dáy) (bĕ cáuse) (thĕ sún) (háp pў) (líght lў) (wént tŏ) (cĭg ă rétte) (ĭn tĕr rúpt) (ĭn thĕ dárk) (ób vĭ oŭs) (rég ŭ l ă r) (cólŏr ŏf) (dówn tówn) (báth róbe) (trúe blúe) The foot is the basic building block of poetry. It is com- posed of a pattern of syllables. These patterns cause the meter of the poem. Meter is a pattern of beats or ac- cents. Figure this out by counting the stressed and un- stressed syllables in a line. Unstressed = ˘ and Stressed = ′
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1 foot 2 feet 3 feet 4 feet 5 feet 6 feet 7 feet 8 feet 9 feet = monometer =dimeter =trimeter =tetrameter =pentameter =hexameter =heptameter =octameter =nonometer Unlike the prose sentence that is determined by subject, verb, and punctuation, the poetic line is measured by the number of feet it contains.
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Answers: 1. 5 2. 3 3. 2 4. 2 5. 4
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You should now understand that syllables form feet, feet form lines, and lines form stanzas. Stanzas also have names:
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Answer: 74
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Types of rhyme: End rhyme: the last words of two or more lines rhyme Internal rhyme: words within a line rhyme Masculine rhyme: most frequently used- the last stressed syllable of the rhyming words match exactly. (“The play’s the thing/Wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the king.”) Feminine rhyme: two consecutive syllables of the rhyming words, with the first syllable stressed. (“The horses were prancing / as the clowns were dancing.”) Types of rhyme: End rhyme: the last words of two or more lines rhyme Internal rhyme: words within a line rhyme Masculine rhyme: most frequently used- the last stressed syllable of the rhyming words match exactly. (“The play’s the thing/Wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the king.”) Feminine rhyme: two consecutive syllables of the rhyming words, with the first syllable stressed. (“The horses were prancing / as the clowns were dancing.”) Finding a poem’s rhyme scheme is easy. Remember that you always use the last word in each line to determine the rhyme scheme. The purpose is to identify and establish a pattern and to consider if the pattern helps to develop sound and/or meaning. Always use lower case letters: a b a c b c …
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