| A | B | 
| form | the way a poem looks on a page | 
| stanzas | lines are grouped this way | 
| free verse | poems that have no regular pattern | 
| voice | is the speaker of the poem that relates the story or ideas | 
| idiom | can't explain literally - it's on the tip of my tongue | 
| rhyme | repetition of similar sounds at the ends of words | 
| repetition | of sounds, words, phrases, or whole lines is a device poets use to emphasize an idea or create a feeling | 
| imagery | appeals to reader's five senses | 
| simile | uses like, as, or as if -compare two unlike things | 
| lines | poems are written this way | 
| structured form | if lines in a stanza have a regular, repeated pattern | 
| speaker | may be the poet; may be a character created by the poet | 
| dialect | a form of language spoken in a certain place by a certain group of people | 
| meter | the pattern of accented and unaccented syllables - creates rhythm | 
| onomatopoeia | bam! pow! | 
| figurative language | words and phrases that help readers picture ordinary things in new ways | 
| metaphor | compare two unlike things - no comparison words used | 
| analogy | comparison between two things that seem dissimilar, in order to show the ways in which they might be similar | 
| personification | The wind laughed as it ran through the trees. | 
| end rhyme | most common; occurs at the ends of lines | 
| inferences | logical conclusions based on evidence | 
| rhyme scheme | end rhyme forms a pattern which can be charted | 
| internal rhyme | rhyme that occurs within a line | 
| alliteration | Bailey bought butterflies. | 
| cliche | overused expression or idea | 
| flashback | used to recall events that happened in a character's past | 
| foreshadowing | a hint or suggestion that something will happen later in the story | 
| hyperbole | exaggeration | 
| irony | means the exact opposite of what it says | 
| rhythm | pattern of stressed & unstressed syllables in each line |