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POETERY LITERARY TERMS • Allusion: Reference to a well-known person, place, event, or work of art. Allusions suggest complex ideas simply and easily. Example – An apple can be an allusion to the Bible and Man’s loss of innocent. • Connotation: A set of associations with a given word that help define its meaning and use. Example – Ever since the September 11 terrorist attack on America, the numbers 911 have taken on a special meaning. POETERY LITERARY TERMS • Cinquain • A cinquain has five lines. • Line 1 is one word (the title) Line 2 is two words that describe the title. Line 3 is three words that tell the action Line 4 is four words that express the feeling Line 5 is one word that recalls the title • Couplet: A stanza consisting of two consecutive lines, usually rhymed. Example: I think that I shall never see A poem as lovely as a tree POETRY LITERARY TERMS Diction: Word choice that determines a writer’s style and tone. Elegy A sad and thoughtful poem lamenting the death of a person. POETRY LITERARY TERMS Figurative Language: Writing or speech not meant to be interpreted literally. Free Verse: A poem that doesn’t use rhyming words to create a sense of rhythm, beat, or flow. POETRY LITERARY TERMS • Literal Language: Writing or speech that is meant to be interpreted literally. The words mean exactly what they say. • Metaphor: A comparison of two or more things that are not alike without the use of “as” or “like.” POETRY LITERARY TERMS • Quatrain: A stanza or poem of four lines. Lines 2 and 4 must rhyme. Lines 1 and 3 may or may not rhyme. Rhyming lines should have a similar number of syllables. • Rhyme Scheme: The way a poem uses rhyming words to create a sense of rhythm, beat, or flow. POETRY LITERARY TERMS • Simile: A comparison of two or more things that are not alike through the use of either “as” or “like.” • Speaker: Person who says the words of a poem, not to be confused with the author of the work. POETRY LITERARY TERMS • Stanza: A fixed number of lines of verse forming a unit in a poem. Stanzas are basically the paragraphs of a poem. • Style: A writer’s way of writing, determined by factors such as diction, imagery, syntax, formality, and organization. POETRY LITERARY TERMS Symbol: An object that stands for something else. Example: Winter can symbolize death. Tone: A writer’s attitude toward his or her subject and audience. The writer’s tone can be serious, funny, formal, informal, bitter, angry, happy, etc. POETRY LITERARY TERMS Mood: Similar to TONE, mood is the emotional quality of the work of literature. The mood of a poem, for example, can be funny, serious, sad, angry, happy, mysterious, scary, etc. Alliteration: The repetition of the same consonant sound in two or more words in a row. For example: Telly told Ted to take Todd to Tina's Toyota. POETRY LITERARY TERMS Assonance: The repetition of the same vowel sound in two or more words in a row. For example: "How now brown cow." Remember, your vowels are A, E, I, O,U, and sometimes Y. Every other letter will be a consonant. Hyperbole: An intentional exaggeration used to emphasize an idea and create a visual image in the reader's mind. For example, "He caught a fish as big as a whale." POETRY LITERARY TERMS Onomatopoeia: The use of words that imitate sounds. For example, SNAP, CRACK, POP, POW, BAM, SLAM. Personification: A literary technique where the author / poet gives a nonhuman object human-like qualities. Example: “The clouds cried cold tears.” Rhyme Scheme: The regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem. The rhyme scheme of a poem is indicated by using different letters of the alphabet for each new rhyme. For example: Roses are red, A Violets are blue; B Sugar is sweet, C And so are you. B POETRY LITERARY TERMS • Imagery: Descriptive language poets use to create word pictures (images). Images are enhanced by SENSORY LANGUAGE. • Sensory Language: Descriptive language that relates to the five senses (sight, touch, taste, sound, smell).