Sound Devices
Forms
Figurative Language
Elements
Misc.
100

 Two words that share the same final sound?

Rhyme

100

Uses poetic language, but does not follow a fixed pattern

Free Verse

100

Uses the words like or as to compare two things

Simile

100

Grouping of words

Lines

100

When the outcome of the situation is the exact opposite of what is expected

Irony

200

Repetition of initial consonant sounds

Alliteration

200

Tells a story 

Narrative poetry

200

Compares by describing one thing as if it were another

Metaphor

200

Logical sections of ideas, like paragraphs in an essay

Stanza

200

An exaggeration used to express strong emotion or comic effect

Hyperbole

300

Repeated use of words or phrases

Repetition

300

Expresses the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker, often in musical verse

Lyric poetry

300

Assigns human qualities to non-human subject

Personification

300

The pattern of rhymes at the ends of the lines

Rhyme Scheme

300

A fourteen-line poem of praise with a specific rhyme scheme.

Sonnet

400

Use of words that imitate sound

Onomatopoeia

400

Follows fixed, traditional patterns that may include a specific rhyme scheme, meter, line length, or stanza structure

Formal Verse

400

Explains, clarifies, or illustrates by drawing comparisions

Analogy

400

The pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a poem

Meter

400

A short unrhymed poem, often about nature. It has one three-line stanza that follows a 5-7-5 syllabic pattern

Haiku

500

Repetition of consonant sounds

Consonance

500

A formal poem of honor or celebration

Ode

500

Direct or implied references to people, places, events, literary works, or artworks

Allusion

500

Unit of stressed and unstressed syllables in a poem

Foot

500

Sentence continues onto the next line in a poem

Enjambment