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AP Literature - Poetry Flashcards

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6308886922ToneAttitude of speaker of poem0
6308889520RepetitionEx. of words, phrases, sounds, images, & ideas Emphasizes meaning of repeated phrase1
6308894853DictionTypes of words poet uses, connotation words have, abstract vs. specific word choice, etc.2
6308900684Syntax/StructureStructure, or lack of structure, can highlight patterns & shifts3
6308906399ImagerySensory details, images4
6308909459IronyAn event or word that is unexpected, connected to sarcasm & satire5
6308915685Pastoral/Idyllic ToneQuaint, idealized, particularly describing nature/country life6
6308924659Urban TonePortraying more aspects of city life through topics and/or settings7
6308930397Rural TonePortraying more aspects of country life through topics and/or settings8
6308932862Narrative ToneSpeaking from the perspective of an outside narrator, can be used to show a variety of interpretations of one situation9
6308947898Satiric Tone (Parody)Making fun of or pointing out the flaws in something10
6308951876Gothic ToneGloomy, horror-like tone11
6308962723Elegiac ToneReferring to a Eulogy12
6308965035Lyrical ToneExpresses poet's emotions in an imaginative way, also refers to rhythm/structure; reads like a song (song lyrics)13
6308980465Elegy/EulogyAddressing someone who has just died; Eulogy has more of a connotation that the person was great in life14
6308986087ParableA simple story used to illustrate a moral or spiritual lesson15
6308990090OdeA lyric poem in the form of an address to a particular subject, often elevated in style or manner and written in varied or irregular meter16
6308996314SonnetA poem with 14 lines, written in iambic pentameter17
6308999400Petrarchan SonnetHas rhyme scheme ABBAABBACDCDCD Usually contains a tone shift where the rhyme scheme breaks18
6309008315Shakespearean SonnetHas rhyme scheme ABABCDCDEFEFGG Ends with rhyming couplet19
6309014612BalladA poem or song narrating a story in short stanzas20
6309019106SestinaA poem with six stanzas of six lines and a final triplet, all stanzas having the same six words at the line-ends in six different sequences that follow a fixed pattern, and with all six words appearing in the closing three-line envoi21
6309024380VillanelleA nineteen-line poem with two rhymes throughout, consisting of five tercets and a quatrain, with the first and third lines of the opening tercet recurring alternately at the end of the other tercets and with both repeated at the close of the concluding quatrain22
6309028918ParallelismSimilar structure of series of things (words, phrases, clauses)23
6309032808AnaphoraRepeating word/group of words at BEGINNING of each new sentence/clause (ex. The Lord did stuff. The Lord did more stuff.)24
6309036603EpistropheRepeating word/group of words at END of each sentence/clause (ex. I'll have my bond! Speak not against my bond!)25
6309039801MetaphorComparing things without using like or as26
6309042773SimileComparing things using like or as27
6309045459AnalogyA comparison between two things, typically for the purpose of explanation or clarification28
6309050991AllegoryA story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one (symbolic)29
6309055323AlliterationRepeating first sounds of words30
6309059369ConsonanceRepeating consonant sounds (not necessarily first sounds)31
6309077334AssonanceRepeating vowel sounds (like alliteration for vowels in middle of words)32
6309079383OnomatopoeiaWords representing sounds33
6309083455EuphemismA mild or indirect word or expression substituted for one considered to be too harsh or blunt when referring to something unpleasant or embarrassing34
6309087401EpithetAn adjective or descriptive phrase expressing a quality characteristic of the person or thing mentioned35
6309092516HyperboleExaggeration36
6309092517LitotesUnderstatement37
6309094340PersonificationGiving inanimate or non-human thing human characteristics (aka prosopopoeia)38
6309100434ParadoxSeemingly contradictory statement that actually has a measure of truth (ex. art is a form of lying to tell the truth)39
6309103186EllipsisTaking out words that are implied (ex. and he to England shall along with you)40
6309105636AntithesisJuxtaposing contrasting things (ex. though studious, he was popular)41
6309107953Chiasmus2 clauses next to each other with reverse grammatical order, no repetition/same words (ex. by day the frolic, and the dance by night)42
6309110189OxymoronPutting 2 contradicting things together (ex. cruel kindness)43
6309113015SynechdocheA part stands for a whole (ex. bread for food)44
6309115618MetonymyAttributive/suggestive word standing for something else (ex. crown for royalty)45
6309118004ApostropheAddressing someone not there or some personified abstraction, like Death46
6309121406MonologueA long speech by one actor/narrator (in poetry)47
6309125709SoliloquyAn act of speaking one's thoughts aloud when by oneself or regardless of any hearers48
6309130335MalaproprismUsing the wrong words purposefully, usually for humor49
6309139058Non sequiturA conclusion or statement that does not logically follow from the previous argument or statement50
6309142560MonometerOne foot per line (2 beats)51
6309145340DimeterTwo feet per line (4 beats)52
6309147928TrimeterThree feet per line (6 beats)53
6309147929TetrameterFour feet per line (8 beats)54
6309150780PentameterFive feet per line (10 beats)55
6309153080HexameterSix feet per line (12 beats)56
6309154995Iambicunstressed/stressed57
6309157871Trochaicstressed/unstressed58
6309160197Anapestic2 unstressed/1 stressed (ex. The Night Before Christmas)59
6309163207Dactylic1 stressed/2 unstressed60
6309165859CoupletStanza of 2 lines61
6309165860TercetStanza of 3 lines62
6309168091QuatrainStanza of 4 lines63
6309168092QuintetStanza of 5 lines64
6309170803SestetStanza of 6 lines65
6309173179SeptetStanza of 7 lines66
6309173180OctaveStanza of 8 lines67
6309175194Free VerseNo true format whatsoever68
6309177412Blank VerseVerse without rhyme, especially that which uses iambic pentameter69
6309182659Internal RhymeRhymes within lines/stanzas, not necessarily at the end of each line70
6309184671Broken RhymeRhymes that break a previously established pattern71
6309191432Irregular RhymeRhyme scheme that is irregular (duh)72
6309194751CaesuraA pause near the middle of a line73
6309200817VoltaShift in tone (usually in the last half of a sonnet)74

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