A | B |
poetry | A kind of rhythmic, compressed language that uses figures of speech and imagery |
speaker | the narrator of a poem; not to be confused with the poet |
imagery | language that appeals to the senses |
figure of speech | A word or phrase that describes one thing in terms of another (ex: similes and metaphors) |
simile | A comparison between two unlike things using like, than, or as |
metaphor | a comparison between two unlike things that does not use a comparative word |
personification | a metaphor in which a nonhuman thing is talked about as if it were human |
rhythm | a musical quality produced by repetition of stressed and unstressed syllables |
meter | a rhythm pattern |
rhyme | The repetition of accented sounds close together in a poem |
end rhyme | rhyming words found at the end of different poetic lines |
internal rhyme | rhyming words found within the same poetic line |
rhyme scheme | The pattern of end rhymes found in a poem |
slant (approximate) rhyme | Two words that are alike in sound but that don't rhyme exactly |
alliteration | The repetition of the same consonant sounds close together in a poem |
assonance | The repetition of the same vowel sounds close together in a poem |
onomatopoeia | The use of a word whose sound imitates or suggests its meaning |
blank verse | poetry written with a definite rhythm pattern but no rhyme pattern |
free verse | poetry that has no meter (rhythm pattern) and no rhyme pattern |
narrative poem | A poem that tells a story |
simile | "He is as strong as an ox" is an example of which term? |
metaphor | "She is my sunshine" is an example of which term? |
internal rhyme | "I'm having a time thinking of a rhyme" is an example of which rhyming pattern? |
alliteration | "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers" is an example of which term? |
onomatopoeia | Snap, crackle and pop are examples of which term? |
personification | "The tree cradled the nest in its arms" is an example of which literary term? |