Rhythm, a beat of the poem, accented syllable, stressed syllables, unaccented syllable, unstressed syllables, End-stopped line, line ends with any punctuation (. , ? !), Enjambment, a line that do not ends with a punctuation, we continue reading, Caesuras, a pause in a line of poetry, usually near the middle., Rhyming couplet, every two lines rhyme, Meter, unit of poetry that determines the beat, Scansion, marks the metrical pattern of a poem by breaking each line of verse up into feet, Foot, a "brick" that builds a line, consists of 1 stressed and 1 unstressed syllable at least, determines the beat and kind of meter in the poem, iamb, type of foot. one unaccented and one accented syllable, Trochee, type of foot. first is accented and one unaccented, Spondee, type of foot. both syllables are consecutively accented, Anapest, type of foot. two unaccented and one accented, Dactyl, type of foot. one accented and two unaccented syllables, Monometer, one foot, Dimeter, two feet, Trimeter, three feet, Tetrameter, four feet, Pentameter, five feet, Pattern, the organization and arrangement of words and lines in a poem (made of lines and stanzas), Wand, / - is placed over a strong syllable, Cup, u - is placed over an unstressed syllable, Foot boundary, | - separates the feet in a line of verse, Caesura, || - a break in speech, either between feet or phrases, Sound, the purpose is to create the rhythm and the tone of the poem. there are 5 sound devices, Rhyme, repetition of the same sound at the end of the word., Rhyme Scheme, is the order pattern of rhymes at the end of the lines of a poem or verse, Slant Rhyme, the near rhyming of words that distantly sound alike., Internal Rhyme, the occurrence of rhyming words within a single line or verse, Alliteration, the repetition of the consonant sound in the beginning of words in the same line., Assonance, the repetition of identical vowel sound in the final syllables of a word., Anaphora, he repetition of the same word at the beginning of the line in the stanza. The purpose is to emphasize the idea., Onomatopoeia, the use of the word that sounds like their meaning., Free Verse, lines in a poem that has rhythm (not rhyme) to them, Simile, similarity directly between two objects, usually using “like” or “as.”, Metaphor, an implied analogy between two different objects., Hyperbole, an exaggeration for instance “I can eat a horse"., Personification, applying human characteristics, Idioms, a phrase\expression that typically presents a figurative, non-literal meaning for the words that comprise the saying., Acrostic , the first letter of each line creates a word/s. (usually an author's name), Ballade, a short narrative poem (2-4 lines in stanzas), most frequently deals with folklore or legends, Blank Verse, unrhymed lines that follow a strict rhythm. Has no set stanzas or line length , Cinquain, The poem is 5 lines and 22 syllables long. Is influenced by Japanese haiku, Elegy, To commemorate the person who died. Can also mourn passing of events., Epic, A long narrative poem that usually describes mythology (Odyssey), Epistle, poem written in the form of a letter, Limerick, very short, humorous and rude poem, Ode, often written in praise of a person, an object or an event (that is still exist), Sestina, the last word of each line repeats in a particular order (a difficult type of poem). 39 lines, 6 lines in 6 stanzas and 3 lines in the final stanza, Sonnet, has two major types - a Shakespearean (English) and Petrarchan (Italian). 14 lines, focusing on love. , Villanelle, Borrowed from French, every line is repeated (ABA ABA ABA...), metonymy, a combination of two ideas that create a new meaning that symbolise something bigger (for instance yellow wood - fall in the road not taken), Synecdoche /sɪˈnek.də.ki/, one word stand for the whole ( step - represents all people who stepped on the road in “The Road Not Taken”, Conceit, long extended metaphor of two ideas that are very different from each other (love and time in “To His Coy Mistress BY ANDREW MARVELL”, Oxymoron, antonyms that stand next to each other, Juxtaposition, antonyms that do not stand next to each other, Ambiguity, double meaning, Intertextuality, referring to another text (a kind of allusion), Epigraph, after write - the last line in the poem which is a funny comment, Interjection, oh, ah, Reversal, example from " The Road Not Taken" - says one thing, then says the opposite, then returns to the first., Inversion, Example from "The Road Not Taken" - In leaves no step had trodden black - leaves turn trodden black after step and not the step turns them trodden black..
0%
Define the term!
Condividi
Condividi
Condividi
di
Alisyanya
Modifica contenuto
Stampa
Incorpora
Altro
Compiti
Classifica
Mostra di più
Mostra meno
Questa classifica è privata. Fai clic su
Condividi
per renderla pubblica.
Questa classifica è stata disattivata dal proprietario della risorsa.
Questa classifica è disattivata perché le impostazioni sono diverse da quelle del proprietario della risorsa.
Ripristina le opzioni
Flash card
è un modello a risposta aperta. Non genera punteggi validi per una classifica.
Login necessario
Stile di visualizzazione
Tipi di caratteri
Abbonamento richiesto
Opzioni
Cambia modello
Mostra tutto
Mentre esegui l'attività appariranno altri formati.
)
Apri risultati
Copia link
Codice QR
Elimina
Ripristinare il titolo salvato automaticamente:
?