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Structure
Sound devices
Types of forms
Things also need to know
Figurative language
100
Lines
Something that helps poets add natural by breaking it up into many individual parts
100
alliteration
is a repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words
100
Lyric
Expresses the thoughts and feelings of something
100
Hyperbole
is A great exaggeration
100
simile
Uses like or as while comparing things
200
Stanzas
The way of groups or lines are organized to create or help the reader organize thoughts
200
assonance
A repetition of similar vowel sounds in stressed syllables that end in different consonant words
200
narrative
Tells a story. Has plot, characters and setting
200
Assonance
Has a repeated sound of vowels in any words
200
Extended metaphor
Describes something as if it were something itself
300
Limerick
A humorous poem with five lines that have a certain ryhme, rythm or pattern
300
repetition
is the use of repeated words, phrases, etc.
300
Ballad
Songlike poem in which it tells storys
300
Consonance
Has a repeated sound of consonants in any word
300
Structure
Is the way on how the poem is organized
400
Haiku
A three line japanese poem. In which the first and third line have 5 syllables and the second has 7 syllables.
400
Rhyme
is the repetition of sounds at the ends of words
400
Free verse
has a lack of structure. Does not have to ryhme.
400
Figurative language
is the writing that is imaginative but not meant to be taken literally or seriosly.
400
Metaphor
Compares things that are unlike each other without using like or as
500
Rhyme scheme
Has a pattern of rhymes. Is descibed with letters using different sounds
500
Onomatopeia
is the use of words that imitate sounds
500
Concrete
Creates a shape or image that goes with the story
500
Sensory language
Is a writing or speech that is appealed to one or more of the five senses
500
Personification
Gives human characteristics to something not human