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Page 1: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Test Review

Page 2: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What is this cartoon an

example of?

Page 3: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What is this poem an example of?

Dewdrops Dancing Down Daisies

By Paul Mc Cann

Don't delay dawns disarming display . Dusk demands daylight . Dewdrops dwell delicatelydrawing dazzling delight .Dewdrops dilute daisies domain. Distinguished debutantes . Diamonds defray delivereddaylights distilled daisy dance.

Page 4: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

• Cafeteria

Boom!Went the foodtrays. Clap! Clap!Goes the teacher.Rip! Went the plastic bag.Munch! Munch!Go the students.Slurp!!!Went the straws.WhisperIs what half the kidsin the roomare doing.Crunch! Crunch!gothe candy bars.

• By: Rachael

What is an onomatopoeia?

How many different words in this poem are an examples of an onomatopoeia?

What are the words?

Page 5: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

• The dog ate my homeworkjust like it was kibble.He started up slowwith a cute little nibbleand then scarfed it downwith a burp and a snort.How was he to knowthat my special reportwas due here this morningprecisely at 8:00.So now it is eaten.I'm sorry it's late.But what can you dowhen your dog needs a snackand your stapled reportcomes under attack?I told him to stopbut he just wouldn't mind.When my dog is hungry,he's not very kind.I'll bring it tomorrow,and you'll see it then.So long as my dogisn't hungry again.

• by Denise Rodgers

Is there a simile in this poem?

What is it?

What is a simile?

Page 6: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What is the rhyme scheme of the first stanza of both of these poems?

There once was a big brown cat That liked to eat a lot of mice. He got all round and fat Because they tasted so nice.

From childhood’s hour I have not been As others were; I have not seen As others saw; I could not bring

My passions from a common spring.

Page 7: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Personification

• What is personification?

• Looking at the picture, come up with a two verse poem that uses personification.

Page 8: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

• Tone of a poem – the poem communicates an attitude about Imagination and reality.

• Apostrophe - is a figure of speech in which someone absent or dead or something nonhuman is addressed as if it were alive and present and was able to reply.

“O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth”

by William Shakespeare

Page 9: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Sense Imagery

• Auditory (hearing)• Gustative (tasting)• Tactile (touching)• Olfactory (smelling)• Visual (seeing)

http://www.frostfriends.org/imagery.html

Wonderful WorldI can seeTrees and grass,The sun and sky;I can tasteChocolate ice cream,Apple pie;I can hearMusic, laughter,Words you said;I can smellPerfume, flowers,Baking bread;I can touchSilk and velvet,A baby's skin;What a wonderfulWorld I'm in!Eva Grant

Page 10: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What type of imagery is presented…

• Good Hours - the cottages up to their shining eyes in snow

• After Apple-Picking - magnified apples appear and disappear...every fleck of russet showing clear

Page 11: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What type of imagery is presented…

• An Old Man's Winter Night - the roar of trees, the crack of branches, beating on a box

• After Apple-Picking - the rumbling .. of load on load of apples coming in.

Page 12: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What type of imagery is presented…

• After Apple-Picking - Essence of winter sleep in on the night, the scent of apples

• To Earthward - musk from hidden grapevine springs

Page 13: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What type of imagery is presented…

• Blueberries - the blueberries as big as your thumb...with the flavor of soot

• A Record Stride - the walking boots that taste of Atlantic and Pacific salt

Page 14: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

What type of imagery is presented…

• The Witch of Coos - the bed linens might just as well be ice and the clothes snow

• You grasp the bark by a rugged pleat

Page 15: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Use the poetic device, alliteration to describe the picture below.

Alliteration - the repetition of a speech sound(typically a consonant) at thebeginning of a word in a sequenceof nearby words

Page 16: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Use the poetic device, Hyperbole to describe the picture below.

Hyperbole is the use of exaggeration for effect

Page 17: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Use the poetic device, metaphor to describe the picture below.

• Metaphor - a figure of speech in which an expression is used to refer to something that it does not literally denote in order to suggest a similarity

Page 18: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Use the poetic device, Onomatopoeia to describe the picture below.

• Onomatopoeia is the formation or use of words such as buzz or murmur that imitate the sounds associated with the objects or actions they refer to.

Page 19: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Use the poetic device, simile to describe the picture below.

Simile is when you compare two nouns (persons, places or things) that are unlike, with "like" or "as."

Page 20: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Use the poetic device, rhyme to describe the picture below.

Rhyme is a poem or verse having a regular correspondence of sounds, especially at the ends of lines.

Page 21: Test Review. What is this cartoon an example of?

Good luck on the testLeonard do you bestStay awake TayvonClifton keep your mind on

Novian poke your head outDuring the test don’t walk aboutDa Cha participates a lotMark the correct answer with a dot

The poetry terms have been taughtDon’t Cheat, you’ll get caughtRalph wake up and turn the test pageBoys and girls, act your age

Jamaya stop talkingThese rules aren’t shockingAnnie don’t whineJaymi tell her she’s fine

Tracie a pencil you will needStudents, this will help you succeedTry your hardestBe your smartest

Good luck on the test todayGet an A