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Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Dec 27, 2015

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Stuart Perkins
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Page 1: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Poetry Literary Poetry Literary TermsTerms

Page 2: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Rhyme

• Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical.

ggaveave….s….saveavehhitit…s…sititwwalkalk….t….talkalk

Page 3: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

•End Rhyme- Occurs at the end of a line of poetry.•Where Alph, the sacred river, ranran

Through caverns measureless to man.man.

•Internal Rhyme- Occurs within a line of poetry.•Once upon a midnight drearydreary while I pondered weak

and weary.weary.

Examples of Rhymes

Page 4: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Rhyme Scheme•The pattern established by the arrangement of rhymes in a stanza or poem, generally described by using letters of the alphabet. •Examples: •I love you, I do. (A)•When the rains start to fall, (B)•I’ll never be blue (A)•With you standing tall. (B)•The boy ate some pie (C)•He started to fly. (C)

Page 5: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

•Lines of poetry grouped according to a specific plan.

•Sometimes called verses.

Stanza

Page 6: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Refrain

• A word, phrase, line, or group of lines that repeats in a poem.

• Sometimes called a chorus.

Page 7: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

•The arrangement of “beats” (syllables) in a line of poetry.

Rhythm

Page 8: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Couplet

• Two successive lines of poetry, usually of equal length and similar meter, with end-words that rhyme.

• Example: – And it grew both day and night, – Till it bore an apple bright.

Page 9: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

•A stanza of four lines of verse usually with a rhyme scheme of ABAB.•Most common form of stanza in English.•Example: •Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,

Old Time is still a-flying; And this same flower that smiles todayTomorrow will be dying.

Quatrain

Page 10: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Meter

• The measurement unit for rhythm

• Since the 1400's meter has tended to be measured by accented and unaccented syllables.

Page 11: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

• A form of poetry that does not contain repeated rhythms or regular rhyme.

Free Verse

Page 12: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Alliteration

• The repetition of initial consonant sounds.

• Example: She sells seashells by the sea shore.

Page 13: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

• The repetition of vowel sounds in stressed syllables that end with different consonant sounds.

• A type of vowel rhyme• Example: Old age should burn

and rave at close of day;Rage, rage, against the dying of the light.

Assonance

Page 14: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Consonance

• The repetition of a consonant sound preceded by a different vowel sound.

• Found in Dr. Seuss books• Example: Clocks on fox tick. Clocks

on Knox tock. Six sick bricks tick. Six sick chicks tock.

Page 15: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

• The use of words or phrases that sound like the things to which they refer.

• Example: BAM, POW, DRIP, SIZZLE, DING

Onomatopoeia

Page 16: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Repetition

• The use, again, of a sound, word, phrase, sentence, or other element.

Page 17: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

•a reference to a person, object, event/historical event, or literary work.•Example (from Obama!)•"I was not born in a manger. I was actually born on Krypton and sent here by my father, Jor-el, to save the Planet Earth.“

What allusion is he making?

Allusion

Page 18: Poetry Literary Terms. Rhyme Occurs when the last vowel and consonant sounds of two words are identical. gave….save hit…sit walk….talk.

Sensory Words

• Words or descriptions that appeal to the senses.– Soft, white sand– The pale, thin skin of his forearm– The mournful creak of the

wooden stairs– Apple pie and cinnamon floated

in the air– Sweet and tangy candy