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Poetic%20Terminology

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Title: Poetic%20Terminology


1
Poetic Terminology
2
What is Poetry?
  • Poetry is thoughts that breathe, and words that
    burn. Thomas Gray
  • Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought
    and the thought has found words. Robert Frost

3
Sound Devices
  • Assonance The repetition of vowel sounds at any
    place in a series of words
  • Do you like blue?
  • Well he seemed so low that I couldnt say no
    Robert Service (The Cremation of Sam McGee, pg.
    709)

4
Sound Devices cont.
  • Alliteration The repetition of a consonant sound
    at the beginning of a series of words
  • Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers
  • Rain races, ripping like wind. Its restless rage
    rattles like rocks ripping through the air.
  • A fly and a flea flew up in a flue.
  • Said the fly to the flea, What shall we do?
  • Lets fly, said the flea.
  • Lets flee, said the fly.
  • So they fluttered and flew up a flaw in the
    flue.

5
Sound Devices cont.
  • Consonance The repetition of a consonant sound
    at any place in a series of words.
  • I dropped the locket in the thick mud.
  • Eric liked the book
  • And the silken sad uncertain rustling of each
    purple curtain. Edgar Allen Poe

6
Sound Device cont.
  • Onomatopoeia The use of words whose sound makes
    one think of its meaning
  • Wham! Bonk!
  • Ding-dong
  • Cuckoo
  • Tick-tock
  • snap, crackle, pop

7
Figurative Language
  • Simile A comparison of two nouns using the words
    like or as
  • My love for you is like a red, red rose
  • Metaphor A comparison of two nouns saying that
    one thing is another
  • All the world is a stage
  • Idiom An idiom is a word or phrase which means
    something different from its literal meaning. Idio
    ms are common phrases or terms whose meaning is
    not real, but can be understood by their popular
    use.
  • Easy as pie
  • Chip off the old block

8
Figurative Language cont.
  • Hyperbole Extreme exaggeration
  • The books weigh a ton.
  • I could sleep for a year.
  • I have a million things to do.
  • Personification When a non-human object has been
    given qualities of a person
  • The wind whispered through the trees
  • The moon danced on the water
  • Oreo Milks favorite cookie.

9
Figurative Language cont.
  • Euphemism the substitution of a mild or pleasant
    expression for one that is too strong or
    unpleasant
  • Passed away instead of died
  • Correctional facility instead of jail
  • Letting someone go instead of firing

10
Figurative Language cont.
  • Oxymoron a figure of speech in which apparently
    contradictory terms appear in conjunction 
  • Jumbo shrimp
  • Original copy
  • Clearly confused

11
Figurative Language cont.
  • Symbol a person, place, thing, or event that
    stands for itself and for something beyond itself
    as well.
  • Examples the American flag symbolizes freedom,
    liberty, and love for America.
  • A wedding band symbolizes_______.
  • A white flag symbolizes__________.

12
Figurative Language cont.
  • Prominent Symbols in Literature
  • The Four Seasons
  • Spring birth, rebirth, new beginnings, new life,
    etc.
  • Summer the prime of life, youthful, energetic,
    growing
  • Fall the decline, the approach of death, getting
    old
  • Winter death, the end of life, something comes
    to an end
  • Day life, goodness, knowledge, honesty,
    happiness, energy, purity, positive, light,
    understanding, clarity
  • Night death, evil, darkness, mystery, bad, the
    end, scary, uninformed, unknown

13
Figurative Language cont.
  • Prominent Symbols in Literature cont.
  • The Cycle of Life
  • Dawn new beginning, birth, rebirth
  • Dusk approach of the end, unknown
  • Paths/Roads journey, lifes journey, choices,
    obstacles
  • Bridges movement from one place to another
    symbolically
  • Water gives and takes life, thought to be the
    source of first life, rebirth
  • Earth mother, life giving, fertility
  • Gardens fertility, life giving
  • Rocks/Doors/Weather obstacles, problems (could
    be good or bad)

14
Rhyme
  • End Rhyme Rhyme that appears at the end of two
    or more lines of poetry
  • I would not, could not, in a box.
  • I could not, would not, with a fox.
  • I will not eat them with a mouse.
  • I will not eat them in a house.
  • I will not eat them here or there.
  • I will not eat them anywhere.
  • I do not eat green eggs and ham.
  • I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

15
Rhyme Scheme
  • Uses the letters of the alphabet to represent
    sounds to be able to visually see the pattern
  • Are labeled according to their rhyme sounds
    (aabbcc)
  • 1st rhyme sound in a poem is a and each time
    the 1st rhyme sound is heard, it is a
  • 2nd rhyme sound in a poem is b and each time
    the 2nd rhyme sound is heard, it is b
  • The pattern continues with c, d, etc.

16
Rhyme
  • Internal Rhyme The rhyming of words within one
    line of poetry
  • Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered,
    weak and weary
  • Over many a quaint and curious volume of
    forgotten lore,
  • While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there
    came a tapping...

17
Rhythm
  • Repetition The repeating of a word or phrase to
    add rhythm or to emphasize an idea
  • And miles to go before I sleep,And miles to go
    before I sleep. Robert Frost, Stopping By
    Woods on a Snowy Evening
  • The road was a ribbon of moonlight, over the
    purple moor, And the highwayman came riding-
    Riding-riding- The highwayman came riding, up to
    the old inn-door. Alfred Noyes, The
    Highwayman

18
Form
a unit of meaning (1 word, a phrase, or even a
sentence)
  • Line

Stanza
lines that are grouped together (usually each
has the same number of lines). A division in a
poem named for the number of lines it contains,
such as a couplet (2 lines), triplet (3 lines),
quatrain (4 lines), and octave (8 lines)
19
Literal vs. Figurative
  • Literal language means exactly what it says,
    while figurative language uses similes,
    metaphors, hyperbole, personification, etc. to
    describe something often through comparison with
    something different.

20
Literal
Im tired and Im going home.
This means Im tired and Im going home. There
is no other meaning other than what is said.
It means exactly what is stated.
21
Figurative
  • To be figurative is to not mean what you say but
    to imply something else.

For example If I tell you, Youre the apple
of my eye
Im not saying that you are a piece of fruit in
my eye.
22
Types of PoetryHaiku
  • A traditional Japanese haiku is a three-line poem
    with seventeen syllables total.
  • It is written in a 5/7/5 syllable count.
  • Often focusing on images from nature, haiku
    emphasizes simplicity, intensity, and directness
    of expression.
  • Line 1 5 syllables
  • Line 2 7 syllables
  • Line 3 5 syllables

An old silent pond... A frog jumps into the
pond, splash! Silence again.
23
Limerick
  • Composed of five lines, the limerick adheres to a
    strict rhyme scheme and bouncy rhythm, making it
    easy to memorize.
  • Typically, the first two lines rhyme with each
    other, the third and fourth rhyme together, and
    the fifth line either repeats the first line or
    rhymes with it. 

Rhyme Scheme aabba
24
Ode
  • An ode is a poem that is about one specific thing
    that you think is truly amazing and praiseworthy.
  • This type of poem can be centered upon a person,
    an object, or something abstract like a feeling
    or an idea.

25
Ode to Olives
  • Oh Olive,You are as precious to me as any
    gem,With your beautiful, pure skin as smooth as
    silkAnd as green as the grass in summertime.I
    love your taste and the smell of your tender
    fruitWhich hides beneath your green
    armor.Olive, sweet, tasty Olive,How I love you
    so and my mealtimes wouldn't be the sameIf you
    weren't in my life.Oh Olive,Nothing can compare
    to you, nothing at all,You are food of the gods,
    a king's richesAnd, most importantly, you are
    mine, oh Olive!

26
Elegy
  • A poem of serious reflection, typically a lament
    for the dead.
  • Towards the end the poet generally tries to
    provide comfort to ease the pain of the situation
  •  The strongest of the tools elegy uses is its
    reliance on memories of those who are no more.

27
Bread and Music
  • Music I heard with you was more than music, And
    bread I broke with you was more than bread Now
    that I am without you, all is desolate All that
    was once so beautiful is dead. Your hands once
    touched this table and this silver, And I have
    seen your fingers hold this glass. These things
    do not remember you, belovèd, And yet your touch
    upon them will not pass. For it was in my heart
    you moved among them, And blessed them with your
    hands and with your eyes And in my heart they
    will remember always,They knew you once, O
    beautiful and wise.

28
Cinquain
  • The cinquain, also known as a quintain or
    quintet, is a poem or stanza composed of five
    lines. 
  • Two main types
  • American cinquain The most common cinquains in
    English follow a rhyme scheme of ababb, abaab or a
    bccb. 

To Helen     Helen, thy beauty is to
me          Like those Nicean barks of
yore,     That gently, oer a perfumed
sea,          The weary, way-worn wanderer
bore          To his own native shore.
29
Cinquain
  • Didactic Cinquain
  • The first line is a one-word title, the subject
    of the poem
  • The second line is a pair of adjectives
    describing that title
  • The third line is a three-word phrase that gives
    more information about the subject (often a list
    of three gerunds)
  • The fourth line consists of four words describing
    feelings related to that subject
  • Fifth line is a single word synonym or other
    reference for the subject from line one. 

30
Cinquain
  • SnowSilent, whiteDancing, falling,
    driftingCovering everything it touchesBlanket

31
Free Verse
  • Written without any set rhyme or rhythm
  • Is very conversational sounds like someone
    talking with you
  • Some do not use punctuation or capitalization, or
    other ways of breaking the rules of grammar.
  • A more modern type of poetry
  • Use your senses when writing

32
e.e. cummings
33
Acrostic
  • type of poetry where the first, last or other
    letters in a line spell out a particular word or
    phrase.
  • The most common and simple form of an acrostic
    poem is where the first letters of each line
    spell out the word or phrase.

34
Acrostic (beginning of line)
35
Acrostic (end of line)
36
Acrostic (middle of line)
37
Shakespearean Sonnet
  • Poem of expressive of thought, emotion or idea.
  • It is 14 lines long which are formed by
    three quatrains (4 lines) with a rhyming
    couplet for the last two lines
  • Each line is 10 syllables long.
  • Lines containing 10 syllables each are called
    IAMBIC PENTAMETER

38
Shakespearean Sonnet
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