Definitions
Poetic Structure
Name that Device
What Do You Mean?
FINAL JEOPARDY
100
Extreme exaggeration.
What is hyperbole?
100

A string of words in a poem

What is a line?

100

The car complained as the key was roughly turned in its ignition.

What is personification?

100

John’s answer to the problem was just a Band-Aid, not a solution.

What is . . . John's fix was temporary, not permanent. 

200
A comparison using like or as.
What is a simile?
200
Similar to a paragraph

What is a stanza?

200

DAILY DOUBLE! 

If I’m not home by midnight, my car might turn into a pumpkin. 

What is an allusion?

200

The sea lashed out in anger at the ships, unwilling to tolerate another battle.

What is . . . the waves of the sea were very rough, so much so that ships could not battle on the water.
300

When a thing or abstract idea is represented as a person

What is personification?

300

A line of poetry containing punctuation at the end

What is an end-stopped line?

300

I can't go out tonight, I'm buried in a sea of paperwork.

What is a metaphor?

300

Her head was spinning from all the new information.

What is . . . the person was overwhelmed with the amount of new information they were learning/getting.

400

DAILY DOUBLE! 

A reference to a person, object, or circumstance from unrelated context 

What is an allusion?

400

Two lines of poetry in a stanza that usually rhyme

What is a couplet?

400

My teacher caught me cheating today, and my parents are going to kill me when they find out. 

What is hyperbole?

400

She was living her life in chains.

What is . . . she felt controlled/held back/restricted by something in her life. 

500

The opposite of what you would expect

What is irony?

500

A single slash is used when quoting poetry to show this

What is a line break?

500

The cast on Michael’s broken leg was a plaster shackle, painted by signatures in various colors. 

What is a metaphor?

500

When I saw her, that was it for me. I’d been struck by Cupid. 

What is . . . he felt immediately drawn to her romantically, in a way he couldn't control.

500

Explain the allusion in Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost:

Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

What is . . . "Eden" from the "Garden of Eden". Biblical reference; refers to the seasonal turning of fall to winter, Eden "sinking to grief" as leaves fall away.