Repetition or correspondence of the terminal sounds of words.
What is rhyme?
100
A type of poetry that is meant to be sung.
What is Lyrical Poetry?
100
The speaker in the poem.
Who is J. Alfred Prufrock
100
A field of white and gold dandelions.
What is Imagery?
100
The more or less regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.
What is Meter?
200
Two consecutive lines of verse linked by rhyme and meter.
What is a couplet?
200
A type of poetry in which a speaker addresses a silent auditor in a specific situation and setting that is reveled entirely through the speakers words.
What is Dramatic Poetry?
200
An example of repetition.
What is Let us go, yellow, Michelangelo, or do I dare?
200
"Tyger Tyger, burning bright, (line 1)
in the forest of the night; (line 2)"
-The Tyger by William Blake
What is End Rhyme?
200
The unit used to measure poetry.
What is foot?
300
The shape of a poem or length has something to do with the meaning of the poem.
What is Concrete Poetry?
300
A type of poetry that tells a story.
What is narrative poetry?
300
An example that shows that Prufrock is not important.
What is line 82-83?
300
The type of verse that "The Word Plum" is written in.
What is Free Verse?
300
A line of poetry that has five feet.
What is pentameter?
400
The type of verse that is most like every day human speech.
What is Blank Verse Poetry?
400
A poem with 14 lines.
What is a sonnet?
400
The tone of the poem.
What is dramatic, sad, and morbid?
Due to the amount of pauses, and how slow the lines read.
400
Alice's aunt ate apples.
What is Assonance?
400
Two unstressed syllables followed a stressed one.
What is anapest?
500
Deliberately repeating the first part of the line.
What is Anaphora?
500
A poem about death.
What is an elegy?
500
An example of alliteration.
What is line 39? "Time to turn"
500
"If love is like a bridge (line 1)
or maybe like a grudge, (line 2)"
(To My Wife, by George Wolff)
What is Slant/Half Rhyme?
500
Two stressed syllables that interrupt the prevailing rhythm, emphasizing a syllable that we would expect to be unstressed.