Erstellt von Taylor Swarthout
vor etwa 8 Jahre
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Frage | Antworten |
Prose | Everyday, ordinary language. |
Poetry | Condensed language. |
Speaker | The voice heard in a poem. |
Subject/Topic | What a poem is about in 1 or 2 words. |
Theme | The comment about the subject the author is making. |
Style | An authors unique way of writing. |
Tone | An authors attitude about the subject he/she is writing. |
Diction | An authors word choice. |
Connotation | The emotional associations of a word. |
Denotation | The dictionary definition of a word. |
Details | They clarify, illuminate, explain, describe, expand and illustrate the main idea or theme. |
Lyric Poem | Expresses the thoughts/feelings/ideas of the speaker. |
Narrative Poem | A poem that tells a story. |
Ballad | A narrative poem, often of folk origin and intended to be sung, consisting of simple stanzas and usually having a refrain. |
Limerick | a five line, usually humorous poem that originated in Ireland. The rhyme scheme is aabba. |
Epic | A long narrative poem, told in a formal, elevated style, that focuses on a serious subject and chronicles heroic deeds and events important to a culture or nation |
Sonnet | Usually the subject is love. 14 line. |
Haiku | A Japanese lyric verse form having three unrhymed lines of five, seven, and five syllables, traditionally. |
Dramatic Poem | a poem which employs a dramatic form or some element or elements of dramatic techniques as a means of achieving poetic ends. The dramatic monologue is an example. |
Structure | Refers to the form of a poem. |
Stanza | A paragraph in poetry. |
Refrain | a reoccurring line or group of lines. |
Free Verse/ Free Form | poetry that has no regular rhyme or rhythm. |
Traditional / fixed verse (form) | poetry that has rhythm and rhyme. |
Couplet | two consecutive (one right after another) lines that rhyme. |
Rhyme | a piece of verse, or poem, in which there is a regular recurrence of corresponding sounds. |
Rhyme scheme | the pattern of rhyming lines in a poem. |
Alliteration | the repetition of identical or similar consonant sounds, normally at the beginnings of words. |
Onomatopoeia | words that mean sounds. |
Assonance | the repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds, normally at the beginnings of words. |
Meter | the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a poem. |
Rhythm | The beat in the poem. |
Simile | Using the words "like" or "as" |
Metaphor / direct metaphor | a comparison between two things that DOES NOT use the words “like”, “as” or “than”. |
Implied metaphor | comparing two things without outright stating the comparison. |
Extended metaphor | a comparison that lasts throughout an entire poem. |
Personification | giving human characteristics to something non-human. |
Hyperbole | extreme exaggeration. |
Imagery | words and phrases that appeal to the 5 senses. |
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