Ap English terms 2 set 2
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| a figure of speech that uses the name of one thing to represent something else with which it is associated | ||
| verse written in one-foot lines | ||
| rhyme in which the final consonant sounds are the same but the vowel sounds are different, as in letter and littler, bone and bean. | ||
| a line of poetry with eight feet: | ||
| a rhythmic group of eight lines of verse | ||
| A lyric verse usually marked by serious, respectful, and exalted feelings toward the subject. | ||
| Unlimited or infinite knowledge | ||
| a verse line having five metrical feet | ||
| (1) a four line stanza (2) a four line division of a sonnet marked off by its rhyme scheme, a stanza of four lines | ||
| a regularly repeated line or group of lines in a poem or song | ||
| the arrangement of spoken words alternating stressed and unstressed elements | ||
| The, the repetition of the accented vowel sound and all succeeding sounds in important or importantly positioned words | ||
| this character is fully developed - the writer reveals good and bad traits as well as background | ||
| The process of measuring the stresses in a line of verse in order to determine the metrical pattern of the line. | ||
| a rhythmic group of six lines of verse | ||
| A metrical foot represented by two stressed syllables | ||
| stays the same character | ||
| a figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole or the whole for a part | ||
| needless repetition of an idea by using different but equivalent words; a redundancy | ||
| three line stanza | ||
| three feet per line | ||
| a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable | ||
| language used in a figurative or nonliteral sense | ||
| A French verse form calculated to appear simple and spontaneous but consisting of nineteen lines and a prescribed pattern of rhymes | ||
| (prosody) the accent in a metrical foot of verse |
