SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 37
Poetry Terms
Alliteration:
the repetition of the initial
 consonant sound of words
within a phrase or sentence
Allusion:

a reference to a person, place,
   or thing--often literary,
mythological, or historical. The
    infinitive of allusion is
           to allude.
Assonance:
    the repetition of vowel
            sounds

“And so, all the night-tide, I lie down
              by the side
Of my darling, my darling, my life and
               my bride.
  --Edgar Allan Poe, Annabel Lee
Atmosphere:
the overall feeling of a work,
which is related to tone and
            mood
Blank verse:
Poetry or prose written in
    unrhymed iambic
       pentameter.

Plenty of modern poetry is
  written in blank verse.
Consonance:
the repetition of consonant sounds

 “The fair breeze blew, the white
            foam flew,
   The furrow followed free;”
 --The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Couplets:
 A pair of rhyming lines in a
poem often set off from the
     rest of the poem.

 Shakespeare’s sonnets all
     end in couplets.
Diction
  the author’s choice of words

   An author has the option of
   choosing any word from our
language, why does he/she choose
   to use certain words and not
             others?
Elegy:
a poem mourning the dead
End rhyme:
  Rhyming words that are at
 the ends of their respective
lines—what we typically think
     of as normal rhyme.
Epic:
a long poem narrating the
 adventures of a heroic
          figure

i.e. Homer’s The Odyssey
Figurative Language:
   Whenever you describe something by
 comparing it with something else, you are
using figurative language. Any language that
goes beyond the literal meaning of words in
   order to furnish new effects or fresh
     insights into an idea or a subject.
Free Verse:
 poetry without a regular
pattern of meter or rhyme
Iambic pentameter:
ten-syllable lines in which
  every other syllable is
         stressed
Imagery:
when an author uses a word or phrase
to stimulate the reader’s memory of
   one or more of the five senses
i.e. “Tita was so sensitive to onions, any time they
 were being chopped, they say she would just cry
       and cry; when she was still in my great-
  grandmother’s belly her sobs were so loud that
  even Nacha, the cook, who was half-deaf, could
                 hear them easily.”
             --Like Water for Chocolate
Internal rhyme:
a rhyme that occurs within
         one line

i.e.“He’s king of the Swing.”
Lyric:
   A type of poetry that
    expresses the poet’s
  emotions. It often tells
     some sort of brief
story, engaging the reader in
       the experience.
Metaphor:
   a comparison between
  essentially unlike things
    without an explicitly
comparative word such as like
            or as

  i.e.“This chair is a rock.”
Meter:
 the measured pattern of
rhythmic accents in poems
Mood:
 The feeling created in the
reader by a literary work or
 passage. The mood may be
 suggested by the writer's
choice of words, by events in
the work, or by the physical
          setting.
Ode:
a serious or lighthearted poem
 revolving around one subject
that is important to the writer
          or narrator
Onomatopoeia:
the use of words that sound
    like what they mean

   i.e. “buzz,” “bang,” or
          “tic-tock”
Oxymoron:
A figure of speech by which
 a word or phrase produces
 an incongruous, seemingly
 self-contradictory effect.

  i.e. “cruel kindness” or
        “pretty ugly”
Personification:
the endowment of inanimate
    objects or abstract
 concepts with animate or
       living qualities

   i.e. “The wind howled
    through the night.”
Prose:
 Writing organized into
sentences and paragraphs
   that is not poetry.
i.e. novels, short stories,
          essays
Quatrain:
a four-line stanza
Refrain:
a phrase or verse recurring
  at intervals in a song or
poem, especially at the end
   of each stanza; chorus
Rhyme:
the matching of final vowel
or consonant sounds in two
      or more words
Rhythm:
the recurrence of accent or
  stress in lines of verse
Simile:
a figure of speech involving a
 comparison between unlike
  things using like, as, or as
           though

i.e.“Her eyes were like stars.”
Sonnet:
a fourteen-line poem written in
      iambic pentameter

 Different kinds of sonnets have
 different rhyme schemes. The
 most notable are Shakespeare’s
    sonnets which employ the
abab,cdcd,efef,gg rhyme scheme.
Stanza:
a major subdivision in a poem

   A stanza of two lines is
 called a couplet; a stanza of
three lines is called a tercet;
   a stanza of four lines is
       called a quatrain.
Symbol:
an object or action in a literary
  work that means more than
     itself, that stands for
    something beyond itself
Theme:

 the idea of a literary work
abstracted from its details
of language, character, and
action, and cast in the form
  of a generalization; the
       lesson or moral
Tone:
the implied attitude of a writer
    toward the subject and
     characters of a work
Voice:
 the authorial presence in a
 piece of literature whether
in the first, second, or third
             person

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Poetry Powerpoint 2
Poetry Powerpoint 2Poetry Powerpoint 2
Poetry Powerpoint 2
mrswjohnston
 
Different Types of Poetry
Different Types of PoetryDifferent Types of Poetry
Different Types of Poetry
ms_mcmanus
 
Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)
Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)
Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)
Ms Maha
 
Poetry PowerPoint
Poetry PowerPointPoetry PowerPoint
Poetry PowerPoint
mary spata
 
Types of Poetry
Types of PoetryTypes of Poetry
Types of Poetry
jconklin
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Forms of poetry
Forms of poetryForms of poetry
Forms of poetry
 
Poetry
PoetryPoetry
Poetry
 
Introduction to poetry
Introduction to poetryIntroduction to poetry
Introduction to poetry
 
Intro to-literary-criticism
Intro to-literary-criticismIntro to-literary-criticism
Intro to-literary-criticism
 
Epic
EpicEpic
Epic
 
Poetry Powerpoint 2
Poetry Powerpoint 2Poetry Powerpoint 2
Poetry Powerpoint 2
 
Different Types of Poetry
Different Types of PoetryDifferent Types of Poetry
Different Types of Poetry
 
Elements of Poetry in English
Elements of Poetry in English Elements of Poetry in English
Elements of Poetry in English
 
Understanding Poetry
Understanding PoetryUnderstanding Poetry
Understanding Poetry
 
Introduction to-poetry
Introduction to-poetryIntroduction to-poetry
Introduction to-poetry
 
Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)
Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)
Introduction to Literature - Lecture (2)
 
Irony
IronyIrony
Irony
 
Poetry ppt
Poetry pptPoetry ppt
Poetry ppt
 
Genres of literature
Genres of literatureGenres of literature
Genres of literature
 
Poetry PowerPoint
Poetry PowerPointPoetry PowerPoint
Poetry PowerPoint
 
Juxtaposition
JuxtapositionJuxtaposition
Juxtaposition
 
Definition of Literature for Fundamentals of Literature
Definition of Literature for Fundamentals of Literature Definition of Literature for Fundamentals of Literature
Definition of Literature for Fundamentals of Literature
 
Prose PPT
Prose PPTProse PPT
Prose PPT
 
Elements of poetry
Elements of poetryElements of poetry
Elements of poetry
 
Types of Poetry
Types of PoetryTypes of Poetry
Types of Poetry
 

Destacado (11)

Types of sentences and types of clauses
Types of sentences and types of clausesTypes of sentences and types of clauses
Types of sentences and types of clauses
 
How to write a stanza poem
How to write a stanza poemHow to write a stanza poem
How to write a stanza poem
 
Author's purpose
Author's purposeAuthor's purpose
Author's purpose
 
Six Traits Of Writing
Six Traits Of WritingSix Traits Of Writing
Six Traits Of Writing
 
Organizing an essay
Organizing an essayOrganizing an essay
Organizing an essay
 
Peer Editing Tutorial
Peer Editing TutorialPeer Editing Tutorial
Peer Editing Tutorial
 
Persuasive presentations
Persuasive presentationsPersuasive presentations
Persuasive presentations
 
Poetry terminology
Poetry terminologyPoetry terminology
Poetry terminology
 
Strong Thesis Statements
Strong  Thesis  StatementsStrong  Thesis  Statements
Strong Thesis Statements
 
Word Choice: Diction and Connotations
Word Choice: Diction and ConnotationsWord Choice: Diction and Connotations
Word Choice: Diction and Connotations
 
Context Clues
Context CluesContext Clues
Context Clues
 

Similar a Creative Writing | Poetry Terms

Poetry terminology
Poetry terminologyPoetry terminology
Poetry terminology
ashokrocking
 
Introduction to poetry and the literally devices
Introduction to poetry and the literally devicesIntroduction to poetry and the literally devices
Introduction to poetry and the literally devices
Tebogo Mothibeli
 
Poetry Terminology
Poetry TerminologyPoetry Terminology
Poetry Terminology
guest0c05af1
 

Similar a Creative Writing | Poetry Terms (20)

66628571 poetry-terms-guide
66628571 poetry-terms-guide66628571 poetry-terms-guide
66628571 poetry-terms-guide
 
Poetry notes bigger font powerpoint
Poetry notes bigger font powerpointPoetry notes bigger font powerpoint
Poetry notes bigger font powerpoint
 
Poetry notes
Poetry notesPoetry notes
Poetry notes
 
Introduction to literature
Introduction to literatureIntroduction to literature
Introduction to literature
 
Poetry terms & types
Poetry terms & typesPoetry terms & types
Poetry terms & types
 
More forms in poetry
More forms in poetryMore forms in poetry
More forms in poetry
 
unit no 3, 6471 English IV B.Ed
unit no 3,  6471 English IV B.Edunit no 3,  6471 English IV B.Ed
unit no 3, 6471 English IV B.Ed
 
PPP Poetry
PPP PoetryPPP Poetry
PPP Poetry
 
Poetry Terminology
Poetry TerminologyPoetry Terminology
Poetry Terminology
 
Poetry terminology
Poetry terminologyPoetry terminology
Poetry terminology
 
Poetry terminology
Poetry terminologyPoetry terminology
Poetry terminology
 
pdfcoffee.com_21st-century-literature-from-the-philippines-to-the-world-pdf-.pdf
pdfcoffee.com_21st-century-literature-from-the-philippines-to-the-world-pdf-.pdfpdfcoffee.com_21st-century-literature-from-the-philippines-to-the-world-pdf-.pdf
pdfcoffee.com_21st-century-literature-from-the-philippines-to-the-world-pdf-.pdf
 
English literature part 2
English literature part 2English literature part 2
English literature part 2
 
Poetry terminology
Poetry terminologyPoetry terminology
Poetry terminology
 
Poetry 001
Poetry 001Poetry 001
Poetry 001
 
Literary_TermsTeaching1.ppt
Literary_TermsTeaching1.pptLiterary_TermsTeaching1.ppt
Literary_TermsTeaching1.ppt
 
Literary terms teachinig
Literary terms teachinigLiterary terms teachinig
Literary terms teachinig
 
Literary terms teaching1
Literary terms teaching1Literary terms teaching1
Literary terms teaching1
 
Introduction to poetry and the literally devices
Introduction to poetry and the literally devicesIntroduction to poetry and the literally devices
Introduction to poetry and the literally devices
 
Poetry Terminology
Poetry TerminologyPoetry Terminology
Poetry Terminology
 

Creative Writing | Poetry Terms

  • 2. Alliteration: the repetition of the initial consonant sound of words within a phrase or sentence
  • 3. Allusion: a reference to a person, place, or thing--often literary, mythological, or historical. The infinitive of allusion is to allude.
  • 4. Assonance: the repetition of vowel sounds “And so, all the night-tide, I lie down by the side Of my darling, my darling, my life and my bride. --Edgar Allan Poe, Annabel Lee
  • 5. Atmosphere: the overall feeling of a work, which is related to tone and mood
  • 6. Blank verse: Poetry or prose written in unrhymed iambic pentameter. Plenty of modern poetry is written in blank verse.
  • 7. Consonance: the repetition of consonant sounds “The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew, The furrow followed free;” --The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
  • 8. Couplets: A pair of rhyming lines in a poem often set off from the rest of the poem. Shakespeare’s sonnets all end in couplets.
  • 9. Diction the author’s choice of words An author has the option of choosing any word from our language, why does he/she choose to use certain words and not others?
  • 11. End rhyme: Rhyming words that are at the ends of their respective lines—what we typically think of as normal rhyme.
  • 12. Epic: a long poem narrating the adventures of a heroic figure i.e. Homer’s The Odyssey
  • 13. Figurative Language: Whenever you describe something by comparing it with something else, you are using figurative language. Any language that goes beyond the literal meaning of words in order to furnish new effects or fresh insights into an idea or a subject.
  • 14. Free Verse: poetry without a regular pattern of meter or rhyme
  • 15. Iambic pentameter: ten-syllable lines in which every other syllable is stressed
  • 16. Imagery: when an author uses a word or phrase to stimulate the reader’s memory of one or more of the five senses i.e. “Tita was so sensitive to onions, any time they were being chopped, they say she would just cry and cry; when she was still in my great- grandmother’s belly her sobs were so loud that even Nacha, the cook, who was half-deaf, could hear them easily.” --Like Water for Chocolate
  • 17. Internal rhyme: a rhyme that occurs within one line i.e.“He’s king of the Swing.”
  • 18. Lyric: A type of poetry that expresses the poet’s emotions. It often tells some sort of brief story, engaging the reader in the experience.
  • 19. Metaphor: a comparison between essentially unlike things without an explicitly comparative word such as like or as i.e.“This chair is a rock.”
  • 20. Meter: the measured pattern of rhythmic accents in poems
  • 21. Mood: The feeling created in the reader by a literary work or passage. The mood may be suggested by the writer's choice of words, by events in the work, or by the physical setting.
  • 22. Ode: a serious or lighthearted poem revolving around one subject that is important to the writer or narrator
  • 23. Onomatopoeia: the use of words that sound like what they mean i.e. “buzz,” “bang,” or “tic-tock”
  • 24. Oxymoron: A figure of speech by which a word or phrase produces an incongruous, seemingly self-contradictory effect. i.e. “cruel kindness” or “pretty ugly”
  • 25. Personification: the endowment of inanimate objects or abstract concepts with animate or living qualities i.e. “The wind howled through the night.”
  • 26. Prose: Writing organized into sentences and paragraphs that is not poetry. i.e. novels, short stories, essays
  • 28. Refrain: a phrase or verse recurring at intervals in a song or poem, especially at the end of each stanza; chorus
  • 29. Rhyme: the matching of final vowel or consonant sounds in two or more words
  • 30. Rhythm: the recurrence of accent or stress in lines of verse
  • 31. Simile: a figure of speech involving a comparison between unlike things using like, as, or as though i.e.“Her eyes were like stars.”
  • 32. Sonnet: a fourteen-line poem written in iambic pentameter Different kinds of sonnets have different rhyme schemes. The most notable are Shakespeare’s sonnets which employ the abab,cdcd,efef,gg rhyme scheme.
  • 33. Stanza: a major subdivision in a poem A stanza of two lines is called a couplet; a stanza of three lines is called a tercet; a stanza of four lines is called a quatrain.
  • 34. Symbol: an object or action in a literary work that means more than itself, that stands for something beyond itself
  • 35. Theme: the idea of a literary work abstracted from its details of language, character, and action, and cast in the form of a generalization; the lesson or moral
  • 36. Tone: the implied attitude of a writer toward the subject and characters of a work
  • 37. Voice: the authorial presence in a piece of literature whether in the first, second, or third person