Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Poetry
- Poetry 1921 by: Merrian Moore
- A Rhymical writing who is written by a person who is inspired by memory or it's sorroundings.
- Internal Rhyming
- External Rhyming
- and
- Genres of Poetry
- Love Poems
- Comedy Poem
- Lonely Poetry
- Nature Poetry
- War Poetry
- Atrocities By: Siegrad Sassoon
- Loviest of Trees by: A.E Houseman
- Road Not Taken By: Robert Frost
- Grammar My Second Woman by:
Eduardo Ramirez
- Meeting at Night by: Robert Browing
- are
- Poetry also has it's
own language
- are grouped by
- Writers
- Speaker
- Tone
- Word Choice
- Voice
- Writing Styles
- A Poet motive or inspiration may
influence from their
- has its
own
preferences
in poetry
- Creates The
- Has
- Kinds of Poems
- Dramatic Monologue
- Lyric
- Epic
- Balad
- A popular song, often recited aloud,
narrating a story, and passed down
orally
- Narative
- Herioc Couplets
- Terza Rima
- Free verse
- uneven lines and absence rhyme
- Enjabment
- The running over of a sentence or phrase from
one verse to the next, without terminal
puntuation, hence not end-stopped. Such verse
can be called run-ons
- Has three lines but the first and last line rhyme
- Two Rhymed lines of iambic pentameter
- A poem that recounts a story
- An extended narrative with a heroic or
superhuman protagonist in an action of
great significance in a vast setting
- short poem ultered by a single speaker, who
expresses a state of mind or a process of
perceptio, thought, and feeling
- A poem representing itself as speech made by
one person to a silent listener, usually not the
reader
- Memories or situations
- Kind of Stanzas
- Stanza
- Two more lines of poery that
together form a division
- Quartain
- Stanza or poem of four lines
with a rhyme sceme of abab
or variant abcb
- Octave
- Couplet
- sestet
- A stanza with six lines
- A two -line stanza with rhyming lines of similar lenght and meter
- A stanza with eight lines
- is
- Figurative Language
- Simile
- Methaphor
- Personification
- Apostrophe
- Allusion
- A reference in a work of literature to
something outside work; known
event,place,person,or thing in history
or another work of literature. The
bible, or mythology
- Direct address to someone or to something that
is not present or which a poem seems to speek
to something that cannot respond
- A figurative use of language that endows the
nounhuman with human characteristics. "Sky
lowered, adn muttering thunder, some sad drops
wep at completing of the mortal sin
- Use of language in which a comparison si
made without the use of the comparative
terms (as,like,than)
- A direct comparison using
terms "as", "like", or "than"
- The use of words to mean
something other tha the
literal meaning
- Metonymy
- Synecdoche
- Symbol
- Oxymoron
- Paradox
- Aself-contradictory or absurd phrase or sentence but
in reality expresses a posible truth. For example: "I
must be cruel only to be kind"
- An expression imposible in fact but not
necessarily self-contradictory. Example
" Frozed Lava"
- Something that is simutaneosly itself and a sing for
something else of real existance. for example: Ask your self
what The Holy Cross signifies
- A figure of speech where the part stands for the
whole or the whole is used to signify a part "The
Law Bread"
- A poet substitutes a word
normally associated with
something for the term usually
naming that thing "Big Apple for
New York "
- is
- Hyperbole
- Onomatopeia
- Understatement
- Allegory
- Sensory Imagery
- Kinesthetic: movement
- Visual: Sight
- Tactile : touch
- Gustatory : taste
- Auditory: sound
- Olfatory: smell
- Thermal: temperature
- Language that evokes a
physical sensation produced
by one or more the sense
- Story in which people, things and events
have another meaning. An Allegory is a
narrative having second meaning
beneath the surface one- a story with two
meanings, a literal meaning and a
symbolic meaning
- impliying more than
said ; saying less than
is meant
- any word whose
sound echoes its
meaning "buzz
and hiss"
- exaggeration
beyond
reasonable
credance " wait
an eternity"
- Synesthesia
- Rhythm
- Scansion
- Meter
- Foot
- Hexameter: 6 feet
- Pentameter : 5 feet
- Tetrameter: 4 feet
- Monometer: 1 foot
- Trimeter: 3 feet
- Heptameter: 7 feet
- Dimeter : 2 feet
- Octameter: 8 feet
- The recurrence of regular units of stressed
and unstressed syllables
- Is the analysis fo
patterns of stressed and
unstressed syllabes
- The regular
recurrence of
sounds
- stress
- Occurs when one
syllable is
emphasized more
than another
- A blending
of different
sense in
describing
something
- Also can be defined by