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Poetry

Poetry. Literary Terms for Grade 10. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE. “Language of the Imagination” Definition: Language based on some sort of comparison that is not Literally true. METAPHOR. METAPHOR. “Speak in imaginative shorthand” Definition:

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Poetry

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  1. Poetry Literary Terms for Grade 10

  2. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE

  3. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE “Language of the Imagination” Definition: Language based on some sort of comparison that is not Literally true

  4. METAPHOR

  5. METAPHOR “Speak in imaginative shorthand” Definition: comparison between unlike things which some reasonable connection is instantly revealed. More forceful: uses ‘is’ to compare ideas

  6. DIRECT METAPHOR

  7. DIRECT METAPHOR Definition: States that something IS something else. Example: X is Y

  8. IMPLIED METAPHOR

  9. IMPLIED METAPHOR Definition: Implies or suggests a comparison between things that have very little in common. Ways of saying something that can open our eyes to a new way of seeing the world.

  10. EXTENDED METAPHOR

  11. EXTENDED METAPHOR Definition: A Metaphor that develops its comparison over several lines or even an entire poem. “Life for me ain’t been no crystal stair”

  12. FIGURE OF SPEECH

  13. FIGURE OF SPEECH Definition: language shaped by the play of the imagination, in which one thing is compared to something that seems to be entirely different. This is never literally true

  14. SIMILE

  15. SIMILE Definition: A figure of speech that uses the words like, as, than, and resembles to compare things that have little or nothing in common.

  16. PERSONIFICATION

  17. PERSONIFICATION Definition: When we attribute human- like qualities to a non-human thing or to an abstract idea. “The future calls”

  18. SYMBOL

  19. SYMBOL Definition: An ordinary object which has extraordinary meaning attached to it. “Red roses for love” “Skull and crossbones for danger”

  20. SYMBOLIC MEANING

  21. SYMBOLIC MEANING Definition: The deeper layer of meaning suggested by a work’s literal, or surface, meaning. “And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.”

  22. CONFLICT Internal Conflict and External Conflict

  23. CONNOTATION

  24. CONNOTATION Definition: All the associations and emotions that are attached to a word. Housman’s “Loveliest of Trees”

  25. AMBIGUOUS

  26. AMBIGUOUS Definition: Allowing for opposing interpretations, or meanings. Frost’s “Mending Wall”

  27. SPEAKER

  28. SPEAKER Definition: The voice that talks directly to the reader in a poem; the speaker is not always the poet. Masters “George Gray”

  29. TONE

  30. TONE Definition: The attitude of the writer or the speaker towardthe subject of the poem or toward the audience. Can be inferred from words and details. Hongo’s “The Legend”

  31. IDIOM

  32. IDIOM Definition: An expression that is peculiar to a particular language. It means something different from the literal meaning of each word. Clifton’s “Miss Rosie”- “I stand up”

  33. FREE VERSE

  34. FREE VERSE Definition: Poetry that does not have regular meter or rhyme. Usually captures natural rhythms of ordinary speech. Means: “Freedom from rules”

  35. BLANK VERSE

  36. BLANK VERSE Definition: Poetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter (no rhyme pattern, 10 syllables).

  37. SONNET Italian (Petrarchan) And English (Shakespearean)

  38. SONNET Definition: Fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in iambic pentameter. Italian: two parts octave(eight lines) and sestet (six) English: four parts three quatrains (four lines) and couplet (pair of rhymed lines)

  39. IAMBIC PENTAMETER

  40. IAMBIC PENTAMETER Definition: Used in Shakespeare, when each line contains five iambs and a total of ten syllables.

  41. RHYME

  42. RHYME Definition: Repetition of accented vowel sounds and all sounds following them in words that are close together in a poem.

  43. RHYMED COUPLET

  44. RHYMED COUPLET Definition: A two-line unit in a poem that rhymes. In a Shakespearean sonnet, the last pair of lines( labeled gg ).

  45. END RHYME

  46. END RHYME Definition: Rhyme which occurs at the end of lines in a poem.

  47. RHYME SCHEME

  48. RHYME SCHEME Definition: A pattern of rhymed lines in a poem. This is indicated by labeling each new end rhyme with a letter of the alphabet. Example: abab cdcd efef gg (E. Sonnet)

  49. INTERNAL RHYME

  50. INTERNAL RHYME Definition: Rhyme that occurs within a line or lines of poetry. “The warm sun is failing, the bleak wind is wailing,” -Shelley

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