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Speech or writing without metrical structure, as opposed to poetry |
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A long poem about the deeds of great people or a nation's history; or heroic and imposing. |
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A simple written description of rural life and pastoral scenes. |
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Two successive lines in poetry rhyming with each other. |
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Undignified or trivial verse, or verse that is badly constructed. |
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A break or pause in a line of poetry |
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A concluding section of a book or play, usually addressed to the audience |
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A collection of selected literary works. |
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A detailed, rather formal discussion or essay. |
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A story in which people, things, or events have symbolic meanings |
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Great exaggeration for effect |
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An attribution of human qualities to inanimate objects; or an embodiment or perfect example. |
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An inconsistency between what is expected to happen and what actually does happen, or between what appears to be the case and what is the case; or a sarcastic use of words to express the opposite of the speaker's thought. |
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A statement that seems self-contradictory but that may be true. |
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A play on words that have the same or similar sounds but different meanings |
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To glance through a book, library, or store in a leisurely, casual way. |
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To read carefully or thoroughly |
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To make a detailed comparison between pieces of writing; or to put in order pages of a manuscript. |
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Stealing words or ideas from another and passing them off as one's own. |
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