| Similes: figures of speech that compares two unlike things, using the words like or as. | "His feet were as big as boats." |
| Alliteration: the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words. | "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers." |
| Metaphor: a figure of speech that compares two unlike things directly, without the use of like or as. | "Her hair is silk." |
| Personification: assigning human qualities to non-human things. | "The tropical storm slept for two days." |
| Onomatopoeia: words that imitate sounds. |
"Boom. Gurgle. Plink."
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| Hyperbole: an expression of exaggeration. | "I nearly died laughing." |
| Symbolism: using an object to represent an idea. A symbol means what it is and also something more. |
Lions often symbolize royalty.
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| Puns: words with a humorous double meaning, a "play on words." |
"A dog not only has a fur coat but also pants."
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| Idioms: expressions that have a meaning apart from the meanings of the individual words. | "It's raining cats and dogs." |
| Foot: the time period into which the beat of the poetic line is divided. A foot is made up of several syllables, some long and some short. | |
| Meter: refers to how the feet are put together to form lines of poetry. The combinations of long and short syllables give poetry a musical feel. | |
| Rhythm: the pattern of long and short syllables in a poetic line. In modern poetry, some words receive greater vocal emphasis than others. | |
| Lyrics: what poets write, the actual words used to form the framework of rhythm and meter. | |
| Mood: the overall feeling the poem creates. Mood, or tone, for example, can be playful, sad, lonely, angry or joyful. |
Monday, October 14, 2013
Poetic Devices Vocabulary
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