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Alliteration Repetition of initial consonant sounds: Example: With blade, with bloody, blameful blade…
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Assonance Assonance is the repetition of middle vowel sounds Example: fight/hive (note the “I” sounds)
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Blank Verse Blank verse is unrhymed uniambic pentameter. (Note: this is what the majority of Shakespeare’s plays are written in.)
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Consonance Consonance is the repetition of inner or end consonant sounds in words. Example: broods with warm breast (note the “r” sounds).
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Foot A foot is made up of a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry (and typically represents one beat).
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Rising Feet The two types of rising feet are Iamb Anapest
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Falling Feet The two type of falling feet are Trochee Dactyl
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Other types of feet Spondee: two unstressed syllables in a row. Pyrrhic foot: two stressed syllables in a row.
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Free Verse Free verse is poetry (usually contemporary) that has no meter or rhyme, and line length may vary.
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Internal Rhyme This happens when you have rhyme within a line (which is itself an example) Another example: “There are strange things done in the midnight sun by the men who moil for gold.”
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Meter Meter is the number of feet per line Monometer: one foot Dimeter: two feet Trimeter: three feet Tetrameter: four feet Pentameter: five feet Hexameter: six feet Heptameter: seven feet
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Onomatopoeia The use of words to imitate real sounds Example: crack, snap, buzz
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Personification Personification is giving human characteristics to either animate or inanimate things.
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Rhyme Exact: rose, toes Slant: hiss, fizz Identical: cat, cat
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Rhyme Scheme The marking of end rhymes (at the end of a line) with letters, such as A, B, A, B Example: Annihilating all that’s made (A) To a green thought in a green shade (A)
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Scansion Marking the feet and meter for the poem, so as to identify its overall pattern, such as iambic pentameter
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Sestina A poem consisting of six stanzas of six lines each, followed by a three line closer. The words at the end of each stanza are repeated in new patterns in successive stanzas.
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Sonnet A poem of 14 lines in iambic pentameter, consisting of three quatrains and a couplet, with a rhyme scheme of ABAB,CDCD,EFEF, GG
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Stanza A grouping of lines in a poem (equivalent to a paragraph in prose). Two lines: couplet Three lines: tercet Four lines: quatrain
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Villanelle A poem consisting of five tercet and a quatrain, in which the first and third lines of the opening tercet are repeated as the final lines of the following tercets—and then used together in the close.
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