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Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To l augh and l ove and w atch w ith w onder-eyes.” “And s ails of s ilk, as s oft as milk, and s ilvern s hrouds had s he.”
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Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

AlliterationThe effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity

Examples:“To laugh and love and watch with wonder-eyes.”

“And sails of silk, as soft as milk, and silvern shrouds had she.”

Page 2: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Poetry Unit

Literary Terms and

Examples

9th Grade Language Arts

Page 3: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

AssonanceThe effect created when words with the same vowel sound are used in close proximity - but where the consonants in these words are different

Example:“…to need neither to eat nor breathe nor sleep…”

Page 4: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

OnomatopoeiaA word that imitates the sound it represents

Examples:“Pitter-patter”WhamBangCrunchBoomPow

Page 5: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Figurative Language Writing or speech that is not meant to

be taken literally Implied or underlying meaning

Example:She is about to kick the bucket.

Page 6: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

MetaphorA figure of speech in which an implied comparison is made between two unlike things that actually have something in common

Example:“Life is a broken-winged bird”

Page 7: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

SimileA figure of speech in which two fundamentally unlike things are explicitly compared, usually in a phrase introduced by like or as

Example:“The forest is spread across the landLike a casually thrown run…”

Page 8: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

DenotationThe dictionary definition of a word

Example:Cold- having little or no warmth

Page 9: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

ConnotationThe emotional association with a word

Example:Cold- sickness, runny nose, cool temperatures, evil

Page 10: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

DictionA writer’s choice of words

Example:Ominous GlowBeaming Light

Page 11: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

ToneThe writer’s attitude towards his or her audience and subject

Page 12: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

PersonificationGiving human traits (qualities, feelings, action, or characteristics) to non-living objects (things, colors, qualities, or ideas)

Example:“And this same flower that smiles today,Tomorrow will be dying.”--Robert Herrick

Page 13: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

SymbolismWhen something represents itself, and something more than itself

Example:American Flag-United States of America-Freedom

Page 14: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Rhyme SchemeA regular pattern of rhyme, one that is consistent throughout the extent of the poem

Page 15: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Rhyme SchemeExample:“If We Must Die”By: Claude McKay

If we must die, let it not be like hogs Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot, While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs, Making their mock at our accursed lot. If we must die, O let us nobly die So that our precious blood may not be shed In vain; then even the monsters we defy Shall be constrained to honor us though dead!O kinsmen! We must meet the common foe! Though far outnumbered let us show us brave,And for their thousand blows deal one death blow! What though before us lies the open grave? Like men we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack, Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!

ABABCDCDEFEFGG

Page 16: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Internal Rhyme A word in the middle of a line of poetry

rhymes with the word at the end of the line Two words in mid sentence rhyme

Examples:“A simple chime, that served to time…”

“The times you rhyme inside each lineThe way you play with the things you say…”

Page 17: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

CoupletA pair of rhyming lines

Examples:“Humpty Dumpty sat on a wallHumpty Dumpty had a great fall…”

“There was a little hermit crabWho thought his tank was rather drab…”

Page 18: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Iambic Pentameter Follows the “weak STRONG” pattern 5 “weak STRONG” sections per line

To be or not to be that is the ques- -tion

da Dum da Dum da Dum da Dum da Dum Da

weak STRONG weak STRONG weak STRONG weak STRONG weak STRONG weak

Page 19: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Blank VerseA poem written in unrhymed iambic pentameter

Example:The Ball PoemBy: John Berryman

What is the boy now, who has lost his ball,What, what is he to do? I saw it goMerrily bouncing, down the street, and thenMerrily over-there it is in the water!

Page 20: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Free VerseA poem that does not have a regular rhyme scheme or meter

Example:“Fog”By: Carl Sandburg

The fog comeson little cat feet. It sits lookingover harbor and cityon silent haunchesand then moves on.

Page 21: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Sonnet Must have 14 Lines Rhyme Scheme: ABABCDCDEFEFGG

Page 22: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

SonnetExample:

“To Fanny”

John Keats (1795-1821)

I cry your mercy–pity–love!–aye, love!

Merciful love that tantalizes not,

One-thoughted, never-wandering, guileless love,

Unmasked, and being seen–without a blot!

O! let me have thee whole,–all–all–be mine!

That shape, that fairness, that sweet minor zest

Of love, your kiss,–those hands, those eyes divine,

That warm, white, lucent, million-pleasured breast,–

Yourself–your soul–in pity give me all.

Withhold no atom’s atom or I die,

Or living on perhaps, your wretched thrall,

Forget, in the mist of idle misery,

Life’s purposes,–the palate of my mind

Losing its gist, and my ambition blind!

Page 23: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Haiku Seventeen Syllables

Five Syllables in Line ONE Seven Syllables in Line TWO Five Syllables in Line THREE

Page 24: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

HaikuExample:Now the swinging bridgeIs quieted with creepers…Like our tendrilled life. -- Basho

Page 25: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Lyric PoemPoetry that does not tell a story but is aimed at expressing a speaker’s emotions or thoughts

Page 26: Alliteration The effect created when words with the same initial letter (usually consonants) are used in close proximity Examples: “To laugh and love and.

Lyric Poem“How Do I Love Thee?”by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.I love thee to the depth and breadth and heightMy soul can reach, when feeling out of sightFor the ends of Being and ideal GraceI love thee to the level of everyday'sMost quiet need, by sun and candle-light.I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.I love thee with the passion put to useIn my old griefs, and with my childhood's faithI love thee with a love I seem to loveWith my lost saints, - I love thee with the breath,Smiles, tears, of all my life! - and, if God choose,I shall but love thee better after death.