Poetry 1
Poetry 2
Poetry 3
Poetry 4
Poetry 5
100

Giving human characteristics to animals or non-living things. 

Personification

100

A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things using the connecting words "like" or "as." EXAMPLE: Love is like a battlefield.

Simile

100

A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things without using the connecting words "like" or "as." EXAMPLE: Love is a battlefield.

Metaphor

100

Saying something different from what you really mean.

Idiom

100

A figure of speech where the writer purposely and obviously exaggerates to an extreme. It is used for emphasis or as a way of making a description more creative and humorous. 

Hyperbole

200

What type of figurative language is this?

crackkkkk,th-th-thump

onomatopoeia

200

What type of figurative language is this? 


The classroom is a zoo!

Metaphor

200

The most important thing to notice in a poem is....

Speaker's thoughts and feelings. 

200

A word that sounds like what it means. EXAMPLE: Buzz! Click! Bang! Whoosh! 

Onomatopoeia

200

What does the line below explain?

Car goes up

And then down

And then up up

Then down to the town

The one important effect of the rhyme scheme of the poem..

A Helps the reader know the figurative language.

B.  It creates a rhythm that emphasizes the motion of the poem. 

C. It creates the speaker's mood. 

B. It creates a rhythm that emphasizes the motion of the poem. 

300

A unified group of lines in poetry. This is often marked by spacing between sections of the poem.

Stanza

300

The moral or lesson in a story or poem...

Theme

300

The ordered patterns of rhymes at the ends of lines of a poem.

rhyme scheme
300

The occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. EXAMPLE: "From Forth the Fatal loins of these two Foes; A pair of star-crossed lover take their life."

Alliteration

300

Most poems are fiction or nonfiction? 

Fiction

400

When a poem does not rhyme it is called....

A. rhythm            B.  Free Verse

C.  a story            D.   a poem

Free Verse

400

How are poems organized?


lines and stanzas

400

She took the big book to the cook.

When words rhyme within a line of a poem it is called...

A.  internal rhyme          B.  metaphor

C.   rhyme scheme          C.  repetition 

internal rhyme 

400

What does this metaphor mean?

My classroom is a junkyard. 

A. The classroom is big.  B. The classroom is empty. 

C. The classroom is  messy D. The classroom is loud.

The classroom is messy. 

400

I go to the end.

The end is sad.

The end is sweet. 

I don't want it to end.

Which statement reflects the theme of this poem?

A. Family can be hard.

B. Ends can be difficult to face. 

C. It is hard to try new things.  

Ends can be difficult to face. 

500

I stomped up the stairs.

My feet pounded like hammers.

I went straight to my room. 

The simile in line 2 suggest the speaker is...

A.   relieved          B.  angry

C.    hungry          D.  excited

Angry

500

I am amazing and absolutely exhausted

The alliteration in the lines above show that the speaker feels...

A. really hungry       B.  really tired

C.  really sick           D.  really big

 Really tired

500

Creates rhythm throughout the poem....

A.  stanzas                B.   lines

C.  rhyme scheme      D.  figurative language 

Rhyme scheme

500

What does this figurative language show....

 My brother is a thorn in my side. 

A. He is not fond of the way his brother is acting.

B. His brother stepped on a thorn. 

C.  His brother poked him with a thorn. 

He is not fond of the way his brother is acting. 

500

She took the big book to the cook.

The internal rhyme in the line above....

A.  shows the problem.   B  adds more musical quality. 

C.  creates a break in the rhyme.    D.  has repetition 

Adds more musical quality. 

M
e
n
u