Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Some Elements of Poetry
definitions from Michael Clay Thomson book
59
English
7th Grade
11/13/2011

Additional English Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
rhyme
Definition
identical sounds at the endings of words, as rule and fool
Term
internal rhyme
Definition
rhymes inside the lines, or a word inside a line that rhymes with a word at the end of a line
Term
end rhyme
Definition
rhyme at the ends of lines of poetry
Term
eye-rhyme
Definition
also called sight rhyme, these are rhymes that look alike, but do not sound alike; they rhyme visually, not to the ear, such as through and enough
Term
rhyme scheme
Definition
using letters to show the arrangement of rhyme, such as ababcdcdefefgg for a sonnet
Term
masculine rhyme
Definition
one-syllable rhyme, as road and strode
Term
feminine rhyme
Definition
two-syllable rhyme, as fiddle and griddle
Term
onomatopoeia
Definition
a word that sounds like what it describes: boom!
Term
alliteration
Definition
the repetition of initial vowels or consonants, such as slurp and soul, or omit and open
Term
assonance
Definition
the repetition of vowel sounds: make and flame
Term
consonance
Definition
the repetition of consonant sounds: edit and mode
Term
stopped consonants
Definition
consonants that stop the breath: PB TD KG
Term
reversal
Definition
a rearrangement of repeated sounds, as wall and law
Term
end-stopped
Definition
a pause (period or comma) at the end of the line
Term
enjambed
Definition
no pause at the end of the line
Term
near rhyme
Definition
also called slant rhyme, this is almost rhyme, as reward and rearward
Term
half-double rhyme
Definition
the last syllable of one word rhymes with the next-to-last syllable of another ! the words man and savanna are examples
Term
elided rhyme
Definition
there are two syllables that would be a perfect rhyme except for the vowel in the second syllable. the words livid and lived are an example
Term
amphisbaenic rhyme
Definition
two syllables are identical, but in reverse! examples would be stick and kits, kill and lick, or (almost) Nile and lion
Term
reverse rhyme
Definition
when words share the first syllable sound, such as native, nature, nadir, and nation
Term
half rhyme or apophany
Definition
when two syllables share their beginning and ending consonants, but not the vowel in between. The words stand and stunned are an example, as are cattle and kettle
Term
SOUND
Definition
the manipulation of language sounds
Term
METER
Definition
the pattern of rhythm of syllables
Term
stress
Definition
the emphasis given to certain syllables in words
Term
foot
Definition
the repeating unit of meter
Term
iamb
Definition
a two-syllable foot with the stress on the second syllable. The English language is naturally so, and Shakespeare used these for the speeches of good or noble figures.
Term
trochee
Definition
a two-syllable foot with the stress on the first syllable. These are anti-iambic, and are often used to convey a feeling of danger or evil. shakespeare used this sort of meter for the witches' chant in Macbeth: Double, double, toil and trouble.
Term
anapest
Definition
a three-syllable foot with the stress on the third
Term
dactyl
Definition
a three-syllable foot with the stress on the first
Term
spondee
Definition
a two-syllable foot with both syllables stressed
Term
catalexis
Definition
dropping an unstressed syllable from the end of a trochaic or dactylic line
Term
pyrrhic foot
Definition
a two-syllable foot, both syllables unstressed
Term
amphibrach
Definition
rare, a three syllable foot, with the middle syllable stressed: petunia
Term
amphimacer
Definition
rare: a three-syllable foot, the middle syllable is short, and the first and third are long
Term
caesura
Definition
a natural break or pause in a line of poetry, usually near the middle of the line, usually marked by punctuation. It is indicated by a double slash//.
Term
iambic pentameter
Definition
five iambs to a line of ten syllables. Sonnets, rime royal, and heroic couplets all use this
Term
trimeter
Definition
a three-foot line
Term
tetrameter
Definition
a four-foot line
Term
pentameter
Definition
a five-foot line
Term
hexameter
Definition
a six-foot line
Term
heptameter
Definition
a seven-foot line
Term
octameter
Definition
an eight-foot line
Term
stanza
Definition
a part of a poem, based on form of meter and rhyme
Term
couplet
Definition
a two-line stanza
Term
triplet
Definition
a three-line stanza, also called a tercet
Term
quatrain
Definition
a four-line stanza
Term
quintet
Definition
a five-line stanza, also called a quinquain
Term
sestet
Definition
a six-line stanza
Term
septet
Definition
a seven-line stanza
Term
octet
Definition
an eight-line stanza
Term
figures of speech
Definition
special poetic ways of expressing things, especially comparisons that are not literally true
Term
simile
Definition
an openly expressed comparison using like or as; Robert Burns used it in "my luve is like a red, red rose."
Term
epic simile
Definition
an elaborate, highly developed comparison the model for this if the very long, wonderful comparisons that we find in Homer's Iliad
Term
metaphor
Definition
an implied comparison. Shakespeare used it in Hamlet to say that "Life is a walking shadow."
Term
personification
Definition
portraying an object as a person
Term
apostrophe
Definition
addressing someone or something not present, as though present. Shelley's Ode to the West Wind" is an example: "O wild, west wind . . . "
Term
oxymoron
Definition
an expression that seems to contradict itself, but actually does not, such as "victory in defeat," or "bright darkness."
Term
synecdoche
Definition
a substitution of a part for the whole, as when Christopher Marlowe, in Dr. Faustus, wrote of Helen of Troy, "Was this the face that launced a thousand ships?" To call fifty ships fifty "sail" would be another example.  Also works in reverse if we let the whole represent the part.
Term
metonymy
Definition
letting a related object represent something, such as "payment to the crown." To say we "read Shakespeare" is an example; we actually read his plays and poems.
Supporting users have an ad free experience!