Common Poetic Elements Flashcards

1
Q

Stanza

A
  • A unit of lines of verse with recurring meter and rhyme-or variants of them-used in an established pattern of repetition and separation in a poem
  • Three main types of poetry: Dramatic, Lyric, and Narrative
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2
Q

Isometric Stanza

A
  • Made up of lines of the same length
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3
Q

Heterometric Stanza

A
  • Made up of lines of different lengths
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4
Q

Quasi-Stanzaic

A
  • A loose grouping of lines and paragraphs of verse
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5
Q

Verse

A
  • A single line of poetry or a group of lines that form a stanza; often used to describe a poem’s structure through its organized patterns
  • Three Main Types: Free Verse, Blank Verse, Rhymed verse
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6
Q

Free Verse

A
  • No specific meter or rhyme scheme
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7
Q

Blank Verse

A
  • Unrhymed lines of iambic pentameter, commonly used in ENglish dramatic and narrative poetry
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8
Q

Rhymed Verse

A
  • Follows a specific rhyme scheme, like couplets or sonnets
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9
Q

Meter

A
  • The rhythmic structure of a verse or lines of a verse
  • Three Types of Meters: Accentual Meter, Syllabic Meter, Accentual-Syllabic Meter
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10
Q

Accentual Meter

A
  • The stresses are counted, and the syllables are variable
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11
Q

Syllabic Meter

A
  • The syllables are counted, but the stresses are varied
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12
Q

Accentual-Syllabic Meter

A
  • Both accents and syllables are measured and counted; most dominant metrical form
  • This Metric form includes poetic feet
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13
Q

Poetic Feet

A
  • Measured units of meter made up of stressed and unstressed syllables
  • Types of Poetic Feet: Anapest, Iamb, Spondee, Trochee
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14
Q

Anapest

A
  • Two short stressed syllables followed by a long stressed syllable
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15
Q

Iamb

A
  • A unit of measure in poetry that includes a short stressed syllable (unstressed) followed by a long stressed syllable (stressed); most common Poetic foot
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16
Q

Spondee

A

Two long stressed syllables

17
Q

Trochee

A
  • A long stressed syllable followed by a short stressed syllable
18
Q

Rhyme Scheme

A
  • The ordered pattern of rhymes at the end of the lines of a poem or verse
  • It is usually referred to by using letters to indicate which lines rhyme. Lines designated with the same letter al rhyme with each others
  • Slant Rhyme
19
Q

Slant Rhyme

A
  • When words have similar sounds but do not exactly rhyme. These sorts of rhymes still fit into a standard rhyme scheme
20
Q

Tone

A
  • An author’s approach and attitude, either direct or implied, toward a specific subject or idea
21
Q

POV

A
  • The perspective from which a story is narrated, determining who is telling the story and how the reader experiences it
  • 4 Different Kinds: 1st Person, 2nd Person, 3rd Person Omniscient, 3rd Person Limited
22
Q

First Person

A
  • Told from the perspective of one character, which includes their experiences, thoughts, and feelings
  • Ex. The Yellow Wallpaper
23
Q

Second Person

A
  • Directly addresses the reader
  • Ex. The Hawk
24
Q

Third Person Omniscient

A
  • The narrator knows all the thoughts and feelings of every character and can reveal them to the reader as needed
  • Ex. Pride and Prejudice
25
Third Person Limited
- The narrator has access to only one character's thoughts and feelings, or even none at all - Ex. Kindred