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Poetry Terms

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Title: Poetry Terms


1
Poetry Terms
2
Alliteration
  • Repetition of the same initial sounds
  • Sally sold seashells at the seashore

3
Allusion
  • Reference to a Person, Place, Thing from that is
    well known (like a historical event or person)
  • In the song, Candle in the Wind Norma Jean
    refers to Marilyn Monroe

4
Apostrophe
  • Words that are spoken to a person who is absent
    or imaginary, or to an object or abstract idea.

5
Assonance
  • Repetition of the same vowel sounds in a line
  • The cat in the hat sat on the mat

6
Ballad
  • narrative poem written in four-line stanzas,
    characterized by swift action and narrated in a
    direct style.

7
Blank Verse
  • A line of poetry or prose in unrhymed iambic
    pentameter.
  • Here are the opening blank verse lines of
    "Birches" When I see birches bend to left and
    right / Across the lines of straighter darker
    trees, / I like to think some boy's been swinging
    them.

8
Cacophony
  • Harsh, unpleasant sounding words
  • Like the sounds of ck

9
Caesura
  • A pause or break in a line (commas, period, dash)
  • The boy, who drank
  • He always felt heavy

10
Closed Form
  • A type of form or structure in poetry
    characterized by regular and consistent elements
    such as rhyme, line length, and metrical pattern

11
Concrete Poem
  • Poem that takes the shape of the object it
    describes.

12
Connotation
  • Implied meaning of a word
  • The word mother caring, kind

13
Couplet
  • A pair of rhymed lines that may or may not
    constitute a separate stanza in a poem.
  • Shakespeare's sonnets end in rhymed couplets, as
    in "For thy sweet love remembered such wealth
    brings / That then I scorn to change my state
    with kings."

14
Denotation
  • Dictionary definition of a word

15
Dialect
  • A sound of language specific to an area

16
Diction
  • Word Choice in a piece of writing

17
Elegy
  • A lyric poem that laments the dead.

18
Elision
  • The omission of an unstressed vowel or syllable
    to preserve the meter of a line of poetry.
  • Alexander uses elision in "Sound and Sense"
    "Flies o'er th' unbending corn...."

19
End-stopped Line
  • There is some sort of punctuation at the end of
    the line
  • After the days journey, he was tired.

20
Epic
  • A long narrative poem that records the adventures
    of a hero.
  • Epics typically chronicle the origins of a
    civilization and embody its central values.

21
Epigram
  • A brief witty poem, often satirical.

22
Euphony
  • Euphony is derives from Greek meaning "good
    sound".
  • Euphony is refers to pleasant spoken sound that
    is created by smooth consonants such as "ripple'.

23
Foot
  • A metrical unit composed of stressed and
    unstressed syllables.
  • For example, an iamb or iambic foot is
    represented by ?', that is, an unaccented
    syllable followed by an accented one.
  • Frost's line "Whose woods these are I think I
    know" contains four iambs, and is thus an iambic
    foot.

24
Form
  • Poetry takes on many forms.
  • One common type of poetry is rhyming couplets
  • In free-form poetry, rhyme and meter are loose,
    allowing for complex rhythms and greater
    contextual freedom.
  • Poems can be long or short. As a result, the
    "types" of poetry will never be completely
    standardized.

25
Free Verse
  • Poetry without a regular pattern of meter or
    rhyme.
  • The verse is "free" in not being bound by earlier
    poetic conventions requiring poems to adhere to
    an explicit and identifiable meter and rhyme
    scheme in a form such as the sonnet or ballad.

26
Haiku
  • A Japanese poem composed of three unrhymed lines
    of five, seven, and five syllables. Haiku often
    reflect on some aspect of nature.

27
Hyperbole
  • Overexaggeration
  • Her butt is as big as New York
  • Im just gonna die because know I know he likes me

28
Iambic
  • An unstressed syllable followed by a stressed
    one, as in to-DAY.
  • A metrical unit composed of stressed and
    unstressed syllables.

29
Ideology
  • The body of ideas reflecting the social needs and
    aspirations of an individual, group, class, or
    culture.

30
Idiom
  • A word or phrase of expression
  • Getting in a car, but on a plane

31
Imagery
  • The ability to see or picture a scene or line
    from the poem through your senses

32
Irony
  • When one thing is said or done or expected to be
    done and the opposite occurs

33
Jargon
  • unintelligible or meaningless talk or writing
  • language that is characterized by uncommon or
    pretentious vocabulary and convoluted syntax and
    is often vague in meaning
  • the language, esp. the vocabulary, peculiar to a
    particular trade, profession, or group

34
Limerick
  • Limericks are short sometimes bawdy, humorous
    poems of consisting of five Anapestic (3
    syllables with stress on 3rd syllable up the
    hill) lines.
  • Lines 1, 2, and 5 of a Limerick have seven to ten
    syllables and rhyme with one another.
  • Lines 3 and 4 have five to seven syllables and
    also rhyme with each other.

35
  • Edward Lear
  • There was an Old Man with a gong,Who bumped at
    it all day longBut they called out, 'O
    law!You're a horrid old bore!'So they smashed
    that Old Man with a gong.

36
Line
  • Single line of words in a poem

37
Metaphor
  • Comparison between 2 unlike things without using
    like or as
  • She is a rose

38
Meter
  • The measured pattern of rhythmic accents in poems

39
Modernism
  • refers to the early part of the twentieth century
    sometimes beginning with the First World War in
    1914, and continuing through the 1930s or so
    perhaps up to the Second World War.
  • Much experimentation with new forms

40
Narrative Ballad
  • A poem that tells a story

41
Ode
  • Odes are long poems which are serious in nature
    and written to a set structure.
  • John Keats's "Ode on a Grecian Urn" and "Ode To A
    Nightingale" are probably the most famous
    examples of this type of poem

42
Onomatopoeia
  • Written like it sounds
  • Buzz, Zang, Plop, Crackle

43
Open Form
  • A type of structure or form in poetry
    characterized by freedom from regularity and
    consistency in such elements as rhyme, line
    length, metrical pattern, and overall poetic
    structure.
  • E.E. Cummings

44
Paradox
  • a statement that seems self-contradictory or
    absurd but in reality expresses a possible truth.

45
Pastiche
  • a work whose style imitates that of another
    writer or period.
  • Pastiche differs from parody in that it is
    usually intended as a kind of tribute rather than
    a satire.

46
Pastoral
  • a  poem that depicts rural life in a peaceful,
    idealized way for example of shepherds or country
    life.

47
Persona
  • A persona, from the Latin for mask, is a
    character taken on by a poet to speak in a
    first-person poem.
  • Margaret Atwood uses the persona of a siren in
    her 'Siren Song', a poem that seduces its
    listeners with dissimulation.

48
Personification
  • Human quality to non-human things
  • The tree screamed when he cut it.

49
Poem
  • designed to convey experiences, ideas, or
    emotions in a vivid and imaginative way,
    characterized by the use of language chosen for
    its sound and suggestive power and by the use of
    literary techniques such as meter, metaphor, and
    rhyme.
  • Written in verse, not prose

50
Poet
  • A writer of poems

51
Poetry
  • Poetry is piece of literature written by a poet
    in meter or verse expressing various emotions
    which are expressed by the use of variety of
    techniques including metaphors, similes and
    onomatopoeia.

52
Prose Poem
  • poem that does not use line breaks.
  • This still allows the poet to use alliteration,
    metaphor, ambiguity, personification, and many
    other poetic techniques, but it can still be
    strange to see a poem that goes all the way to
    the right-hand margin.

53
Realism
  • Realism is an aesthetic attitude stressing the
    truthful treatment of material, the normal and
    everyday, life as it truly is

54
Repetition
  • deliberate use of the same words or phrases
    multiple times to achieve a sense of expectation.
  • The reader comes to expect the word to be
    repeated.
  • Then the poet can continue to use the word or
    phrase with one effect or choose to not use that
    expected word for another effect.
  • In music the refrain or chorus

55
Rhyme
  • The matching of final vowel or consonant sounds
    in two or more words. The following stanza of
    "Richard Cory" employs alternate rhyme, with the
    third line rhyming with the first and the fourth
    with the second
  • Whenever Richard Cory went down town,We people
    on the pavement looked at himHe was a gentleman
    from sole to crownClean favored and imperially
    slim.

56
Rhythm
  • The recurrence of accent or stress in lines of
    verse. In the following lines from "Same in
    Blues" by Langston Hughes, the accented words and
    syllables are underlined
  • I said to my baby,Baby take it slow....Lulu
    said to LeonardI want a diamond ring

57
Run-on line
  • Also known as enjambment
  • There is no punctuation at the end of a line,
    instead the thought continues on to the next line

58
Simile
  • Comparison using Like or as
  • She is like a rose

59
Slang (part of diction)
  • highly informal speech that is outside
    conventional or standard usage and consists both
    of coined words and phrases and of new or
    extended meanings attached to established terms
  • slang develops from the attempt to find fresh and
    vigorous, colorful, pungent, or humorous
    expression, and generally either passes into
    disuse or comes to have a more formal status

60
Sonnet
  • A fourteen-line poem in iambic pentameter.
  • The Shakespearean or English sonnet is arranged
    as three quatrains and a final couplet, rhyming
    abab cdcd efef gg.

61
Stanza
  • A division or unit of a poem that is repeated in
    the same form--either with similar or identical
    patterns or rhyme and meter, or with variations
    from one stanza to another.

62
Stress
  • Stress is the emphasis that falls on certain
    syllables and not others
  • the arrangement of stresses within a poem is the
    foundation of poetic rhythm.

63
Syntax
  • The grammatical order of words in a sentence or
    line of verse or dialogue. The organization of
    words and phrases and clauses in sentences of
    prose, verse, and dialogue. In the following
    example, normal syntax (subject, verb, object
    order) is inverted
  • "Whose woods these are I think I know."

64
Terza rima
  • poetry written in three-line stanzas (or
    tercets) linked by end-rhymes patterned aba,
    bcb, cdc, ded, efe, etc. There is no specified
    number of stanzas in the form, but poems written
    in terza rima usually end with a single line or a
    couplet rhyming with the middle line of the last
    tercet.

65
Tone
  • The implied attitude of a writer toward the
    subject and characters of a work

66
Understatement
  • A figure of speech in which a writer or speaker
    says less than what he or she means the opposite
    of exaggeration. The last line of Frost's
    "Birches" illustrates this literary device "One
    could do worse than be a swinger of birches."

67
Ut pictura poesis
  • As is painting so is poetry
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