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Published byDeirdre Wilson Modified over 8 years ago
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Poetry vocab Take notes!
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Hello!!
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Each poem is broken into… Stanzas Lines Feet A foot is the repeated chunk of syllables The way a waltz requires three beats over and over. Those three beats would be the foot.
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Foot labels: see board for marks Iamb=2 beats, “Iambic foot” The falling out of faithful friends, renewing is of love Trochaic, trochee=2 beats, Double, double, toil and trouble Fire burn and cauldron bubble Anapest, anapestic=3 beats I am monarch of all I survey Dactylic, dactyl=3 beats Take her up tenderly
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Once you identify the foot: Count how many feet per line. Your choices are: Monometer=once Dimeter-twice Trimeter-3x Tetrameter=4x Pentameter=5x Hexameter=6x Heptameter=7x Octameter=8x
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SOMETIMES Poets mix up their rhythm, or throw in a spondee (2 beats) or monosyllabic (1 beat) foot for effect.
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Add these words to your vocab list SPONDEE, SPONDAIC Means two equally stressed syllables Monosyllabic foot One syllable line, common in modern poetry
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Blank verse= Unrhymed iambic pentameter. How many beats per line in blank verse? If this does not make sense to you, listen to the sound…
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Dactylic hexameter How many beats per line? Can’t figure it out???? Listen…
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Anapestic dimeter How many beats per line?
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Spondaic tetrameter How many beats?
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What is it? Ye say they all have passed away That noble race and brave That their light canoes have vanished From off the crested wave Don’t know? Listen….
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