Poetic Sound Effects
Figurative Language
More Figurative Language
What Type of Poem? Examples
What Type of Poem? Definitions
100

The name for the pattern of stressed (strong) and unstressed (weak) syllables

Meter

100

Comparison of two unlike things where one word is used to designate the other (one is the other)

Metaphor

100

Consonant sounds repeated at the beginnings of words

Alliteration 

100

How like Eve's apple doth thy beauty grow,

If they sweet virtue answer not thy show!

Couplet

100

A poem of 14 lines using any number of formal rhyme schemes, in English typically having ten syllables per line

Sonnet

200

The pattern of rhyming words or sounds

Rhyme scheme

200

Words that imitate the sound they are naming 

Onomatopoeia 

200

A reference to someone or something famous

Allusion 

200

An old silent pond...

A frog jumps into the pond,

splash! Silence again.

Haiku

200

No rhyme scheme, no regular meter but still rhythmical

Free verse

300

Words that sound alike because they share the same ending vowel and consonant sounds

Rhymes

300

Comparison of two unlike things using "like" or "as" 

Simile

300

Language that provides a sensory experience using sight, sound, smell, touch, taste

Imagery

300

Well, it's one for the money

Two for the show

Three to get ready

Now go, cat, go

Quatrain

300

Poem of 17 syllables, in three lines of five/seven/five, traditionally about nature, does not rhyme

Haiku

400

The beat created by the sounds of the words in a poem

Rhythm 

400

The literal meaning of the words is not the meaning of the expression

Idiom

400

A non-living object is given human or life-like qualities

Personification

400

There was an old man from Peru

Who dreamt he was eating his shoe. 

He awoke in a fright

In the middle of the night 

And found it was perfectly true.

Limerick

400

A humorous poem consisting of five lines; first/second/fifth lines must have 7-10 syllables while third/fourth lines must have 5-7 syllables; rhyme schemeis AABBA

Limerick
500

A word at the end of one line rhymes with a word at the end of another line

End rhyme 

500

An intentional exaggeration or overstatement, often used for emphasis

Hyperbole

500

Comparison of two or more unlike things in order to show a similarity in their characteristics 

Analogy

500

The fog comes

on little cat feet. 

It sits looking 

over harbor and city

on silent haunches 

and then moves on.

Free verse

500

A stanza of four lines, most often with alternating rhyme

Quatrain

M
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n
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