Transcript Document

Poetry is like a song…
(That’s a simile.
If you don’t know what a simile is,
you will in a minute. Read on…)
Poetry Terms
•Figures of Speech- Tools that help to create
images in a reader’s mind to help him understand a
person or an idea
•Devices of Sound- Language tools that poets
use to help their writing sound “cool”… also used to
help highlight important ideas
Simile
•Figure of speech
• A direct comparison using like or as
•Example: Your nose is LIKE a button
•Example from a song:
Metaphor
•Figure of speech
• An implied/indirect comparison
•Example: Her eyes were an inviting blue lake, and I
wanted to dive in for a swim…
•Example from a song:
Personification
•Figure of speech
• Human qualities attributed to inanimate objects or animals
•Words used to make something seem alive
•Example: The wind howled
•Example from a song:
Hyperbole
•Figure of speech
• An extreme exaggeration to attain desired effect
•Example: My dad had a cow when he saw my grades
•Example from a song:
Imagery
•Use of sensory information to create mental pictures which
reinforce common themes
•Sight, sound, smell, touch, taste
•Often occurs in groups- image clusters
•Example: Color imagery, Religious imagery
• Example from a song:
Symbolism
• The use of a concrete object, name, place, event or
character to represent an abstract idea
•Example: Red rose= love
River= a journey
•Example from a song:
Irony
• When the opposite of what’s expected occurs
•Example: You can’t get a job because you have
TOO much education
•Example from a song:
UGH
!
Onomatopoeia
• Device of sound
• A word that sounds like the sound it describes
•Example: Buzz, honk, tweet
•Example from a song:
Assonance
• Device of sound
• The repetition of a vowel sound
•Example: My words like silent raindrops fell
Repetition of long “I” sound
Example from a song:
Consonance
• Device of sound
• The repetition of a consonant sound
•Example: Rubber baby buggy bumpers
Repetition of “B” sound
Example from a song:
Alliteration
• Device of sound
• The repetition of a consonant sound at the beginnings of
words
•Example: Tangled trail of tears
Repetition of “T” sound
Example from a song:
Rhyme
• Device of sound
• The use of similar/identical sounds
in a pattern
•Example: the cat in the hat ate a rat on a mat
•Example from a song:
•We can use these sound devices and their natural stressed
syllables, lack of stress syllables, and pauses to create
rhythm in poetry… one of which is
Iambic Pentameter
•The most common verse line in English poetry. It consists
of five verse feet, with each foot an iamb-that is, an
unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
Shakespeare’s plays are written almost exclusively in iambic
pentameter.
•Guess which famous English poet (and playwright) used
this rhythm and meter often when he wrote?