Poetic terms Flashcards

1
Q

Dictions

A

choice of words and/or grammatical constructions (o.e., formal, colloquial, jargon, slang, etc.)

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2
Q

Connotation

A

suggested or associated meaning (skeletons=death)

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3
Q

Denotation

A

dictionary definition (skeleton = bony structure)

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4
Q

Imagery

A

sensory content of poems; appeals to the five senses

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5
Q

Tone

A

the attitude of the author, evident from the diction, use of symbolism, irony, and figures of speech. ( Tone can be described as playful, sad, happy, humorous, etc.)

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6
Q

Simile

A

items from different classes are compared by a connective such as “like,” “as,” or “than” or by a verb such as “appears” or “seems.” If the objects are compared from the same class, e.g., “New York is like Chicago,” no simile is present. An appropriate simile: “ She is like the rose.”

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7
Q

Metaphor

A

items from different classes are implicitly compared, WITHOUT a connective such as “like” or “as.” ( “She is the rose, the glory of the day.)

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8
Q

Metonymy

A

something is named that replaces something closely related to it. ( In the following passage, James Shirley names certain objects [ “ Scepter and crown,” “sythe and spade.”] , using them to replace social classes [powerful people and poor people] to which they are related:

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9
Q

Synecdoche

A

the whole is replaced by the part, or the whole. (“He has a new set of wheels.” “Give me a hand.”

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10
Q

Personification

A

giving human qualities to abstractions pr inanimate objects such as love, beauty, etc.

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11
Q

Apostrophe

A

an address to a person or thing not literally listening.

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12
Q

Irony

A

without using figures of speech, speaker may use this device, saying things that are not to be taken literally, forming a contrast.

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13
Q

Verbal Irony

A

contrast between what is said and what is meant

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14
Q

Sarcasm

A

heavy, mocking verbal irony. Almost never found in literature.

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15
Q

Understatement

A

saying less than what is meant

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16
Q

Hyperbole (overstatement)

A

exaggeration.

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17
Q

Situational Irony

A

contrast between what is intended and what is accomplished

18
Q

Paradox

A

an apparent contradiction

19
Q

Allusion

A

a reference in a literary work to a person, place, or thing in history or another work of literature

20
Q

Symbol

A

an image loaded with significance beyond literal definition; suggestive rather than definitive

21
Q

Natural symbols

A

symbols recognized as standing for something in particular even by people from different cultures.

22
Q

Conventional Symbols

A

symbols which people have agreed to accept as standing for something other than themselves

23
Q

Stanza

A

a rhythmical unit in which lines pf poetry are commonly arranged

24
Q

Meter

A

a pattern of stressed (accented) sounds in English poetry ( meter from the Greek word for “measure”).

25
Q

Rhyme

A

stresses at regular intervals Ωza

26
Q

Alliteration

A

sometime defined as the repetition of the initial sounds

27
Q

Assonance

A

the repetition, in words of proximity, of the identical vowel sounds preceded and followed by differing consonant sounds

28
Q

Consonance

A

the repetition of identical consonant sounds and differing vowel sounds in words in proximity

29
Q

Onomatopoeia

A

the use of words that imitate sound, such as hiss or buzz

30
Q

Couplet

A

a stanza of two line, usually, but not necessarily, with end-rhymes

31
Q

Triplet (or tercet)

A

a three line stanza, usually with one rhyme

32
Q

Quatrain

A

a four-line stanza, rhymed or unrhymed

33
Q

Sonnet

A

a closed, fixed form. A fourteen-line poem, predominantly in iambic pentameter

34
Q

Villanelle

A

a closed, fixed French form; 5 tercets and quatrain

35
Q

Blank Verse

A

english poetry written in unrhymed iambic

36
Q

Free verse (vers libre)

A

rhythmical lines varying in length, adhering to no fixed metrical pattern, and usually unrhymed. Seems formless but is not. Form pr pattern often largely based on a repetition and parallel grammatical structure.

37
Q

Lyric Poem

A

a short poem, often songlike, with the emphasis not on narrative but on the speaker’s emotion or reverie. Whereas a narrative is set in the past, telling what happened, a course, glance forward or backward.)

38
Q

Elegy

A

a lyric poem that is melancholy or mournfully contemplative; sometimes laments a death

39
Q

Ode (hymn)

A

a lyric poem that is long, elaborate, and on a lofty theme such as immortality or a hero’s victory

40
Q

Narrative Poem

A

a poem whose main purpose is to tell a story