Poetic Devices
Poetic Devices: The Sequel
Poems, Poets, Songs and Structures
Roots Are For Plants
Oldies but Goodies
100

What is it called when two words sound the same, like cat and rat?

Rhyme

100

Write a hyperbolic statement.

My backpack weighs a ton, my mom will kill me if I don't do my chores, etc.

100

What is the basic building block of songs and poems?

Lines

100

+100 for each root word that relates to space

terra, lun, astro

100

What is the major turning point in a novel called?

Climax

200

What is the difference between a simile and a metaphor?  

A simile uses "like" or "as" to make the comparison

200

What are the three kinds of rhyme?  +200 if you can write an example of all three.

Internal, external, both

200

What is a grouping of lines in a poem called?  What is a grouping of lines in a song called?  +200 for each correct response.  

stanza, verse, chorus, etc.

200

Write a word that is a combination of two or more roots.

Autograph, phonograph, photograph, autocrat...

200

+200 for each of the four parts of setting.

General, specific, time, SES

300

What makes a piece of writing imagery?

It needs to use sensory details to paint a picture in the readers mind

300

What is it called when an object, color, place, etc. represents something beyond its literal form?

Symbolism

300
If an author uses allusion, what are they expecting you already know?

The source material of the allusion

300

What root word that we've learned this year would be the opposite of "vivi/vita"?

Cide

300

Name and describe the three points of view in narration.

1st, 2nd, 3rd.

1st is the perspective of a character in the story

2nd uses "you" as the character

3rd is an observer from outside the story

400

Explain the two different reasons for using repetition in songs or poems.

Sound - to make things catchy, like a chorus

Meaning - to reiterate an important point (i.e, to draw attention to it)

400

Explain how extended metaphor works.

One overarching metaphor, with tiny related metaphors/similes throughout

400

Name three musical artists (or their songs) we've used in class so far.

...

400

We've gone over two pairs of root words that share definitions.  What are the words in those pairings? 

(Two pairs x two words = four words total.  Math, yo. Math.)

photo and lum = light

pan and omni = all/everything

400

List all all the four major types of conflict, and provide an example for each.

Person vs. person, person vs. society, person vs. nature, person vs. self

500

Find all the devices in this passage:


The giant green gate cast a giant shadow on the ground.  The girl looked up, noticing for the first time how large the dilapidated mansion actually was.  The back of the mansion contained a giant tower, looking like it reached all the way to heaven.  As she sat there, watching, a stiff breeze kicked up, knives cutting through her clothes and skin.  She shivered.

Simile, metaphor, alliteration, hyperbole

500

Organize all of the devices we've learned into three categories:

- Devices used only for sound purposes

- Devices used only for meaning purposes

- Devices used for both

Sound:  internal, external, both rhyme, alliteration

Meaning: metaphor, simile, imagery, allusion, hyperbole

Both:  repetition

500

Name three poets we've read so far in class (and/or their poems)

Acevedo (Hair), Eliot (Preludes), Neruda (One Hundred Love Sonnets), Yeats (When You Are Old), Shakur (The Rose That Grew From Concrete), Thomas (Do not go gentle into that good night), Alexie (Powwow at the End of the World)

500

What root words would apply to things you might do in an ELA classroom?  You need at least four.

Voc, graph, liter, spec, auto, -ology

500

Why is a third person omniscient narrator unlikely to be unreliable or untrustworthy?  What is the difference between unreliable and untrustworthy narration?  (Both parts must be answered)

3rd-person omniscient knows everything, so they aren't going to provide incorrect information, and they aren't part of the story, so they have no reason to be untrustworthy.


Untrustworthy narrators lie to you on purpose.