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Sound Devices / Pattern and Rhyme

Sound Devices / Pattern and Rhyme. “Poetry is Music to My Ears!”. Basic Information.

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Sound Devices / Pattern and Rhyme

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  1. Sound Devices / Pattern and Rhyme “Poetry is Music to My Ears!”

  2. Basic Information • 0601.8.13 Identify sound patterns (e.g., alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhyme scheme, accent, rhyme, repetition), figurative language (e.g., metaphor, simile, hyperbole, personification), and other conventions of verse (e.g., limerick, lyric, narrative, haiku) in poetry. • 0701.8.13 Identify sound devices (e.g., alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhyme scheme), figurative language (e.g., metaphor, simile), and other conventions of verse in poetry (e.g., limerick, lyric, narrative, haiku) and explain how these contribute to the poem’s meaning and to the poem’s effect. • 0801.8.14 Identify sound devices (e.g., alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhyme scheme, assonance, internal rhyme, slant rhyme, repetition) and figurative language (e.g., metaphor, simile), and other conventions of verse in poetry (e.g., limerick, lyric, narrative, haiku) and explain how these contribute to the poem’s meaning and to the poem’s effect.

  3. Rhyme Exact repetition of sounds in words at the ends of lines. • Little Jack Horner • Sat in a corner - Eating his Christmas pie.

  4. Internal Rhyme Rhyme that occurs within a line of verse the grains beyond age, the dark veins of her mother -Dylan Thomas Old Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard

  5. Slant Rhyme • Rhymes that are CLOSE but not exact. • “I know what we’ll do,” she shouts. • I know how we’ll work this out. • When I have no pain in my heart • I will still bear the scar…

  6. Accent • The accent on syllables is what determines rhythm in poetry. • Accents are patterned so as to form meters in which each line has a definite number of accented units. • These meters keep a beat.

  7. Accent, or Stress • Most English words have one strong stress. • You can discover this by looking in a dictionary and seeing how they are marked, or simply saying the word out loud. • Once you’ve determined where the stresses fall, read the line out loud. • You’ll find your voice naturally accentuates certain syllables.

  8. Accent, or Stress • There are patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables. • Iambic: - / • Trochee: / - • Spondee: / / • Pyrrhic: - - • Anapest: - - / • Dactyl: / - -

  9. Onomatopoeia • A word that imitates the sound it represents • Example Words: • Splash, pop, kerplunk Hands clap and slap, and fingers snap. from “Sound Off” by Susan Anderson

  10. Alliteration • Repetition of the same consonant (letters that are not vowels) sounds in several words • “While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping..” from “The Raven” by Poe

  11. Assonance • Repetition of similar vowel sounds in words that are close together in a poem. • “On the morrow he will leave me, as my hopes have flown before..” • From “The Raven” by Poe

  12. Repetition • Repeated sounds, words, phrases, lines, or stanzas • And miles to go before I sleep, • And miles to go before I sleep. • from “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Frost • Because I do not hope to turn again • Because I do not hope • Because I do not hope to turn.... • From T. S. Eliot's "Ash-Wednesday":

  13. Personification • Giving human characteristics to non-human objects. But when the trees bow down their heads, The wind is passing by. from “Who Has Seen the Wind” by Christina Georgina Rossetti

  14. Simile • Comparing two things using like or as. O My Luve’s like a red, red rose, That’s newly sprung in June; from “A Red, Red Rose” by Robert Burns

  15. Metaphor • Comparing to things without using like or as. Saying something is something else. Life is a broken-winged bird That cannot fly. from “Dreams’ by Langston Hughes

  16. Practice • 1. We will identify poetic devices in a poem together. • 2. In your group use the 4 line stanza you’ve been given and find all the poetic devices you can find. Share with the class. • 3. On your own use the 4 line stanza you’ve been given and find all the poetic devices you can find. Share with the class.

  17. Test Questions • What will a test question about this information look like? • 1. Which is not an example of alliteration? • A. “Awaiting the sensation…” • B. “a cheap and chippy chopper..” • C. “sit in solemn silence…” • D. “big, black block”

  18. Test Question- sample • Which of the following words rhyme in the stanza? (look at stanza 3 on overhead) • A. “Bentley” and “Moody” • B. “old” and “told” • C. “told” and “pen” • D. “saw” and “Ben”

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