Devices and Machines
Are You Smarter than an **American** 5th Grader?
Poem Master
Examples from the North
Miscellaneous
100

What device is this?

An inhuman object/thing gets human characteristics e.g. the flowers danced in the wind.

Personification.
100

What device is this? A device where one thing is compared to another thing using "like" or "as".

Simile.

100

This kind of poem tells a story.

Narrative poem.

100

She is a snake.

This is an example of...

Metaphor.

100

True/false? All words need a vowel.

True.

200

What devices is present here?

OFFICER: The victims were dismembered and sacrificed on an altar made of antlers.

DETECTIVE: Dear God.

OFFICER: Most likely, yes.

Pun.

200

What word in the following sentence needs a punctuation mark in order to make it grammatically correct? “Its going to be sad if our team loses the football game tonight.”

Apostrophe in 'Its'.

200

This kind of poem requires all words at the end of each line to rhyme.

Monorhyme.

200

That workout was so exhausting -- my feet's gonna fall off! This is an example of...

Hyperbole.

200

What is the main character of a story called?

The protagonist.

300

This device is the continuation of a sentence without a pause beyond the end of a line. 

It can also be understood as breaking up a sentence into multiple lines.

Enjambment.

300

They are letters that make us open our vocal track to create sounds. Every language has different ones, but "A, E, I, O, and U" are examples of this in English. 

Vowels.

300

This kind of poem has the first letter of every line form a word. 

Dreaming 

Of brown fluffy fur

Good boys and girls that fetch tennis balls

Something everyone should have

Acrostic poem.

300

This is like beat in poems. Every word has at least one of these. "Beautiful" has 4. "Bananas" has 3. "Apple" has 2. "Pot" has 1. 

What is a syllable?

400

A literary device that involves repetition of words or phrases in a group of sentences, clauses, or poetic lines. The repetition usually occurs at the beginning of these structures.

Anaphora.

400

This device involves a common saying or phrase whose meaning cannot be understood by simply looking at the meaning of the individual words.

e.g. "break a leg", "raining cats and dogs", "let the cat out of the bag" 

Idiom

400

This poem requires:

-12 lines of 60 syllables

-3 stanzas; 8,4,4,4 syllables in each stanza with the following rhyming scheme: AABB, CCDD, EEFF.

-iambic rhythm

What is a minute?

400

"Tomorrow we will be downsizing our department -- I'm afraid we will have to let you go."

What is an example of euphemism?

400

What are the characteristics of a poem?

Must be in lines

Must have words

500

What kind of rhythm is present in this passage?

"Two households, both alike in dignity, 

In fair Verona, where we lay our scene..."

Iambic rhythm.

500

*SPLAT*

The pancake Shelly threw stuck itself onto the ceiling.

SPELL THE DEVICE.

What is an example of onomotopeoia?

500

This kind of poem:

-is written in quatrains (stanzas of 4 lines each)

-has a repeating line at the end of each stanza

-each line has just 8 syllables.

Kyrielle.

500

List all devices (4 minimum) present in this passage:

His palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy
There's vomit on his sweater already, mom's spaghetti
He's nervous, but on the surface, he looks calm and ready
To drop bombs, but he keeps on forgetting

Assonance, consonance (alliteration), rhyme, hyperbole

500

Define each of the following:

Subject, predicate, independent clause, dependent clause

Subject: the thing that the clause or sentence is about.

Predicate: the action that the thing in the clause or sentence is doing.

Independent clause: a group of words that can stand by itself as a sentence.

Dependent clause: a group of words that cannot stand by itself as a sentence.

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