Meter and Rhythm
Rhyme and Sound Devices
Structure and Lineation
Forms and Functions
Random Mix
100

This is the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.

Meter

100

This term describes the repetition of identical sounds at the ends of lines.

End rhyme

100

A group of lines forming a unit in a poem.

Stanza

100

This poetic form is typically 14 lines and divided into an octave and a sestet, with a volta marking the shift in thought.

Petrarchan Sonnet

100

This term refers to a six-line stanza often used to resolve or comment on the issues introduced in the preceding eight lines of a Petrarchan sonnet.

Sestet

200

A metrical foot consisting of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable.

Iamb

200

A rhyme that occurs within a single line of poetry.

Internal rhyme

200

A poem uses a quatrain where the second and fourth lines rhyme, while the first and third do not. Name this rhyme pattern.

ABCB rhyme scheme

200

A type of poem written in honor or praise of a specific subject, often characterized by formal tone and heightened language.

Ode

200

Identify the metrical foot that consists of two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed syllable, often used to create a galloping rhythm in poetry.

Anapest

300

This metrical foot has two stressed syllables.

Spondee

300

Repetition of consonant sounds within or at the ends of words in close proximity.

Consonance

300

This occurs when a sentence or phrase continues beyond the end of a line of poetry.

Enjambment

300

This poem consists of six stanzas of six lines each, followed by a three-line envoi, with a specific pattern of repeating end words.

Sestina

300

In a Shakespearean sonnet, this is the structural feature that differentiates it from a Petrarchan sonnet, specifically in its final two lines.

Heroic couplet

400

A line of poetry with four metrical feet.

Tetrameter

400

A word that imitates the sound it describes, such as “buzz” or “sizzle.”

Onomatopoeia

400

A sonnet’s volta typically occurs here, marking a thematic or tonal shift.

Between the octave and sestet

400

This term describes a type of poetry that focuses on the expression of personal emotions or feelings, often written in the first person.

Lyric poetry

400

This poetic form repeats entire lines or phrases according to a strict pattern across 19 lines and is known for its fixed refrain.

Villanelle

500

The process of marking the stresses in a line of poetry to determine its meter.

Scansion

500

A poetic technique used to create a musical quality in a line of poetry.

Prosody

500

This poetic technique can combine with enjambment to create a sense of interruption or abruptness, emphasizing a dramatic or emotional pause within the middle of a line.

Caesura

500

This narrative poem is traditionally written in quatrains with alternating lines of iambic tetrameter and iambic trimeter, often recounting dramatic stories.

Ballad

500

A pause that disrupts the natural flow of a line, but occurs at the very end of a poetic thought, often marked by punctuation.

End-stop

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