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Poetry Terms
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Alliteration The repetition of a consonant sound at the beginning of neighboring words. (Consonants are all the letters except a, e, i, o, u, and y.) EXAMPLE: The dark dance of death whisked her away. Repetition of the “d” sound in “dark dance of death” Like a lucky charm, he looks on. Repetition of the “l” sound in “Like,” “lucky,” and “looks”
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Allusion A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art EXAMPLE: In Martin Luther King, Jr's "I Have A Dream" speech, he started off by saying "Five score years ago". He was alluding to Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address which started with the phrase "Four score and seven years ago".
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Assonance The repetition of vowel sounds of neighboring words. (Vowels are a, e, i, o, u, and y.) EXAMPLES: Talking and walking, hours on end. Repetition of the “ah” sound in “talking” “walking” A turtle in the fertile soil. Repetition of the “er” sound in “turtle” “fertile”
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Couplet Two successive lines of poetry with end-words that rhyme. They often work as a unit. EXAMPLE: True wit is nature to advantage dress'd; What oft was thought, but ne'er so well express'd. — Alexander Pope
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Free Verse Poetry not written in a regular rhythmical pattern or meter; a poem that does not rhyme and does not conform to a standard beat or rhythm EXAMPLE: next slide
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"Oranges" Gary Soto (1995) The first time I walked With a girl, I was twelve, Cold, and weighted down With two oranges in my jacket. December. Frost cracking Beneath my steps, my breath Before me, then gone, As I walked toward Her house, the one whose Porch light burned yellow Night and day, in any weather. A dog barked at me, until She came out pulling At her gloves, face bright With rouge. I smiled, Touched her shoulder, and led Her down the street, across A used car lot and a line Of newly planted trees
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Hyperbole An exaggeration (to emphasize something or for humorous purposes). EXAMPLES: I love you more than life itself. Love is exaggerated. He could eat a horse. His appetite is exaggerated.
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Idiom an expression that does not mean what it looks like it should
EXAMPLES: It’s raining cats and dogs. Don’t Let the cat out of the bag.
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Imagery A word or phrase that appeals to one or more of the five senses EXAMPLE: From “Mrs. Flowers” by Maya Angelou A small widening of her thin black lips to show even, small white teeth, then the effortless closing.
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Internal Rhyme “Back into the chamber turning, all my
Rhyme within a line EXAMPLE: “Back into the chamber turning, all my soul within me burning.”
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Irony Saying the opposite of what you actually mean; a contradiction between what is expected and what actually happens EXAMPLE:
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Lyric Poetry Highly musical verse that expresses the observations and feelings of a single speaker
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Metaphor A comparison of two unlike things without using like or as.
EXAMPLES: Bob is a hungry wolf. Bob is compared to a wolf. Sue is a rose, filling the room with her sweet scent. Sue (or Sue’s scent) and rose are being compared.
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Narrative Poetry A story told in verse (a story in poem form) EXAMPLE:
“Casey at the Bat” a poem about a baseball game and how one man could win it or lose it.
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Onomatopoeia Words which imitate the sound they refer to. EXAMPLES:
The eagle whizzed past the buzzing bees. “whizzed” and “buzzing” Rip-roar fire, the gun stutters on. “Rip-roar” and “stutters”
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Personification A type of metaphor in which non-human things or ideas possess human qualities or actions. Examples The wind whispered her name. Wind is being personified: “wind whispered”, because “wind” can’t actually “whisper.” Justice is blind. Justice is being personified: blind justice, because justice has no actual eyes that could be blinded.
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Repetition A sound, word, phrase or sentence that is repeated in a story or poem From “The Highwayman” “…and the highwayman came riding, riding, riding, The highwayman came riding up to the old inn door.” (riding & the highwayman)
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Rhyme Scheme A pattern of rhyme in a poem Violets are blue
EXAMPLE: Roses are red Violets are blue Sugar is sweet And so are you! A B C B
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Simile A comparison of two unlike things using the words like or as.
EXAMPLES: Bob is hungry as a wolf. Bob and wolf are the two things being compared, using “as” Sue smells like a rose. Sue & rose are the two things being compared, using “like”
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Speaker The imaginary voice of the poet in a poem Like a narrator
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Stanza A formal division of lines in a poem considered as a unit
Similar to a paragraph in prose (regular writing)
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