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Copy of Poetry

Published on Mar 26, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

POETRY

  • Type of writing in which words are chosen and arranged to create a...
  • strong image, message, or feeling through meaning, sound, and rhythm.

LINES

  • Rows of words that don't follow rules of...
  • Capitilization and punctuation you see in other writings.

STANZAS

  • Groups of lines set apart by spaces.

RHYME

  • Lines that ryhme, or end in similar sounds.

RHYME SCHEME

  • The last two words of certain lines follow a rhyming pattern.

FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE

  • Use this to create images, draw connections, provoke emotions for reader.
  • Often used to compare a person, place, thing, or idea.

SIMILE

  • A comparison that uses like or we to show a connection

METAPHOR

  • A direct comparison between two things.
  • This is without using like or as.

ANALOGY

  • An extended comparison between two things.

PERSONIFICATION

  • Using human qualities to describe nonhuman things.

ALLUSION

  • Reference to another person, place, thing, or text.

SYMBOLISM

  • Use of one object or idea to signify something else.

POINT OF VIEW

  • Position or outlook from which the speaker tells a story.
  • The speaker is the narrator of the story its from their POV

THEME

  • Message or universal understanding that a poem explores

TONE

  • The speaker's attitude toward the subject of the poem.

MOOD

  • However the writer chooses to describe the feel and
  • The mood of the characters and their surroundings in the book or poem.
  • Or how the reader feels as he/she reads.

METER

  • A recurring pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.

REPETITION

  • Repeating of words or lines in poetry.

ALLITERATION

  • The repitition of an initial consonant sound.

ASSONANCE

  • The repitition of a vowel sound

ONOMATOPOEIA

  • Use of words suggested by sounds
  • Ex. Splash, beep, boom, pow.

BALLAD

  • Poem that tells a story using stanzas of 2-4 lines.
  • And a refrain ir lines that repeat.

FREE VERSE

  • Poem that does not follow any set rules or rhythm or rhyme.

HAIKU

  • Very short poem with 3 lines and just 17 syllables.
  • Dors not rhyme and is usually about nature.

LIMMERICK

  • Short poem with five lines and a regular meter and rhyme scheme.
  • Usually humorous

LYRIC POEM

  • Short poem focused on speaker's thoughts or feelings.
  • Often like a song.

ODE

  • Poem that includes 2 or more stanzas with similar structures.
  • Each line must rhyme with another line in the same stanza.
  • Usually a serious poem about a meaningful topic.

SONNET

  • A poem that has 14 lines with 10-12 stanzas and similar structures.
  • Last 2 or 6 lines question the idea that was throughout the poem.

DENOTATIONS

  • Dictionary definitions of a word.

CONNOTATIONS

  • Meanings suggested or implied by a word
  • Separate from its dictionary definition