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AP English III / Falkner - Poetic Elements

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115200039allegorya tale in prose or verse in which characters, actions or settings represent abstract ideas or moral qualities
115200040allusiona reference to a person, a place, an event, or a literary work that the writer expects the reader to recognize
115200041clichecommonly used phrases, images, etc. that are no longer considered "fresh"; try to avoid these
115200042connotationwhat is implied in a word or suggested by it beyond its recognized simple meaning
115200043denotationthe dictionary meaning of a word
115200044dictionchoice of words
115200045hyperbolea figure of speech using exaggeration or overstatement, for special effect
115200046imagerynote the difference between concrete and abstract words or phrases that create pictures or images in the reader's mind. appeals to the senses
115200047ironya contrast or incongruity between what is stated and what is meant, or between what is expected to happen and what actually happens
115200048verbal ironythe speaker's meaning and intent are the opposite of what's said
115200049dramatic ironyspeaker's views and ideas are different from those of the author
115200050situational ironyevents turn out to be different from or opposite from what is expected
115200051juxtapositionthe placement of words, phrases, or ideas next to each other for a specific effect such as humor, surprise, or irony
115200052metaphora figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things, which are basically dissimilar ("life is a dream")
115200053meterthe pattern of accented and accented syllables in a line of verse
115200054metonymya figure of speech in which something very closely associated with a thing is used to stand for or suggest the thing itself ("Crown" for king)
115200055oxymorona figure of speech that combines opposite or contradictory ideas or terms ("living death")
115200056paradoxa rhetorical device that implies a contradiction in terms or concepts but that actually expresses something that is true (Don't go near the water until you've learned to swim)
115200057personificationa figure of speech in which something nonhuman is given human qualities
115200058speakerthe narrator, point of view, or persona through whom the poet is speaking. should not be confused with the poet.
115200059structurethe organizational plan of a poem determined by its development of ideas (content) and its corresponding use of form to establish specific structural divisions.
115200060symbolany object, person, place or action that has a meaning in itself and that also stands for something larger than itself, such as a quality, belief, or value
115200061synecdochea figure of speech in which a part of a thing is used to stand for or suggest the whole ("Faces" for people)
115200062themethe main idea or concept around which a poem develops
115200063blank versenot so much a kind of poem, but more of a way poetry is written. it is composed of a series of unrhymed lines in iambic pentameter
115200064free versemuch like blank verse in that is isn't a kind of poem. it is defined by lines in a poem that have no specific metrical or rhythmical patters. most of the poems in the anthology are free verse, as are man contemporary poems
115200065enjambmentthe running on of one line to the other without stopping for punctuation
115200066end stopthe ending of a line with puncuation
115200067onomatopoeiathe use of a word whose sound in some degree imitaties or suggest its meaning
115200068alliterationthe repetition of similar sounds, usually consonants, in a group of words
115200069assonancethe repetition of similar vowel sounds, especially in poetry
115200070consonancethe repetition of similar consonant sounds, usually at the ends
115200071euphonyusing smooth and pleasant sounds
115200072cacophonyusing rough and harsh sounding words
115200073elegya lyric poem noted for its formality in tone and diction, usually written in response to a death or to contemplation of a tragedy. traditionally, it moves from grief to lament to consolation
115200074epigraphan inscription, motto, or quotation at the beginning of a literary composition
115200075free verselines having no specific metrical or rhyming pattern.
115200076sestinaa lyrical poem organized into six stanzas of six lines each, usually followed by a conclusion of three lines. the last words of the six lines of the first stanza are repeated in the subsequent stanzas 1-2-3-4-5-6 6-1-5-2-4-3 3-6-4-1-2-5 5-3-2-6-1-4 4-5-1-3-6-2 2-4-6-5-3-1 2-4-6/5-3-1
115200077found poema poem taken directly from another source, but limited to the taker's meaning
115200078sonnetfourteen line poem - usually in iambic pentameter
115200079petrarchan (Italian) sonnetABBA ABBA CDE DCE / CDE CDE / CDC CDC
115200080english sonnetThree quatrains each with its own rhyme schemes ABAB CDCD EFEF GG(<--ex)
115200081villanellesix stanzas: 5 triplets and a quatrain ABA, ABA, ABA, ABA, ABA, ABAA
115200082imagistpoem which consists entirely of concise, speciific images - bits of information about the world registered by the senses
115200083haiku5 syllables 7 syllables 5 syllables

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