[PDF] Poetry Terms




Loading...







Intending to Repeat: A Definition of Poetry - Oxford Academic

ANNA CHRISTINA RIBEIRO Intending to Repeat: A Definition of Poetry i the task of defining poetry In light of the enormous variety of poetic tradi-

[PDF] What Is Poetry? - Palm Beach State College

Verbal Irony: words used to convey the opposite of their apparent meaning, as in when one says “Way to go” to someone who has made a mistake Dramatic Irony: 

[PDF] The Poem as Craft: Poetic Elements - English

The most memorable poetry balances evocation and exposition Poems evoke meaning and emotion in subtle, figurative ways, and yet also expose or describe an 

[PDF] Poetry Terms

Examples of fixed forms include the sonnet, ballad and villanelle • Free verse – poetry that is not in a fixed form Also called open form • Imagery – the use 

[PDF] Literary Terms Definition Example Example from Class Poetry

Men sell wedding bells Blank Verse: un-rhyming verse written in iambic pentameter In poetry and prose, it has a 

[PDF] The Routledge Dictionary of Literary Terms

No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented,

[PDF] Rhythm and Meaning in Poetry - Patrick Suppes

Turning to the literature on rhythm in poetry, there is much rigorous sense is that of formal definitions in mathematics A simple example is the

[PDF] Poetry Terms 8139_1poetterm.pdf

Lowell Writing Center: LC-406B, 978-656-3365 Bedford Writing Center: LIB 7A, 781-280-3727

Poetry Terms Alliteration ² the repetition of initial consonant sounds. Ex: On the bald street breaks the blank day.

Allusion ² a reference to a person, place, thing, event or idea in history or literature used to

suggest an emotion or idea. Ex: an allusion to the Garden of Eden might suggest a notion of paradise or a time of purity and innocence. (Allusion is different from illusion, which is a deception or erroneous perception of reality.) Apostrophe ² a figure of speech iQ ROLŃO POH SRHP·V VSHMNHU MGGUHVVHV VRPHRQH MNVHQP RU dead, or something nonhuman as if it were alive and present and could reply. Assonance ² the repetition, at close intervals, of vowel sounds. Ballad ² a fairly short narrative poem written in a songlike stanza form. Consonance ² the repetition, at close intervals, of consonant sounds found within or at the end of words.

Couplet ² 2-line stanza, which may or may not rhyme. End rhyme ² UO\PH POMP ŃRPHV MP POH HQG RI OLQHVB ([B ´HP UXQV MQG LP creeps/ For awhile, till it sleepsµ Eye rhyme ² words that look alike but do not sound alike. Ex: bough, cough; brow, blow.

Figurative language ² words that are literally inaccurate but are used to describe or define something. Usually this language makes use of metaphors or similes to compare and equate something to another. Fixed form ² poetry that is categorized by its patterns of lines, meter, rhymes and stanzas. Examples of fixed forms include the sonnet, ballad and villanelle. Free verse ² poetry that is not in a fixed form. Also called open form. Imagery ² the use of images, often figurative ones, that appeal to one of the 5 senses. Images can be olfactory (smell), auditory (sound), tactile (touch), visual (sight), or gustatory

(taste). Internal rhyme ² rhyme that comes within one or several lines. Ex: I wished upon the most beautiful moon in June and hope/ that soon I will fall in love. Lyric ² a short poem that expresses the personal emotions and thoughts of a first-person

narrator and is characterized by its musical qualities. Metaphor ² an implied comparison in which the figurative word is substituted for the

RULJLQMO PHUP LQ ŃRQPUMVP PR POH H[SOLŃLP ŃRPSMULVRQ RI M VLPLOH B ([ ´+H LV M OLRQ LQ POH

ILHOGBµ

Lowell Writing Center: LC-406B, 978-656-3365 Bedford Writing Center: LIB 7A, 781-280-3727

Meter ² the recurrence of rhythmic stresses or accents in a regular pattern. Narrative poem ² a poem that tells a story. Onomatopoeia ² use of a word that resembles the sound it denotes. Ex: buzz, bowwow, choo-choo. Personification ² giving human characteristics to an animal, object or abstract concept. Poetry ² literature written in meter or verse. It is characterized by language chosen for its sound and suggestive power and by such literary techniques as structured meter, rhyme, and metaphor. Prose poem ² a poem which is written in prose format; i.e. it has no fixed lines. Quatrain ² a four-line stanza. Rhyme (see also End, Eye, Internal and Slant rhyme) ² two or more words that repeat the same end sounds. ALso called perfect rhyme. Ex: send, bend, trend. Rhyme scheme ² the pattern of end rhymes denoted by lowercase letters (a, b, c, d" where each letter represents a new rhyme. Setting ² the place and time in which a poem takes place; not all poems have settings. Simile ² an explicit comparison of one thing to another using the connecting words like, as, than, similar to, resembles or sees. Ex: He is like a lion in the field. Slant rhyme ² words, usually in a set rhyme scheme, which have similar sounds but are not perfect rhymes. Also called approximate rhyme, imperfect rhyme, or near rhyme. Ex: arrayed/said. Sonnet ² a 14-line poem that has traditionally followed specific rules of thyme and meter. Stanza ² a group of lines in a poem. People often mistakenly call them paragraphs.

Style ² POH MXPORU·V PMQQHU RI H[SUHVVLRQB $Q MXPORU·V VP\OH LV the result of choices about

vocabulary, organization, imagery, pace, and recurring themes. Symbol ² a figure of speech in which a person or thing stands for some other idea/abstract concept. Ex: the color white has become a symbol of purity or innocence. Theme ² the central or unifying idea that is developed in a work. Tone ² POH H[SUHVVLRQV RI POH MXPORU·V MPPLPXGH PRRMUG POH VXNÓHŃP PMPPHUB

Verse ² MQRPOHU QMPH IRU SRHPU\ GHULYHG IURP POH IMPLQ ´YHUVµ PHMQLQJ ´PR PXUQBµ HP UHIHUV

to the fact that poetr\ OLQHV ´PXUQµ MP M VSHŃLILŃ SRLQP YHUVXV prose, which has no fixed lines.


Politique de confidentialité -Privacy policy