poetic terms Flashcards

1
Q

Diction

A

choice of words and/or grammatical constructions

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2
Q

Connotation

A

suggested or associated meaning

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3
Q

Denotation

A

dictionary definition

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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

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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 compared are 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,” “scythe 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 part by 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 or inanimate objects such as love, beauty,

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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, speakers 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

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

rhythmical unit in which lines of poetry are commonly arranged

24
Q

meter

A

a pattern of stressed (accented) sounds in English poetry

25
Q

rhyme

A

the repetition of sounds

26
Q

alliteration

A

sometimes defined as the repetition of initial sounds (“All the awful auguries,” or “Bring me my bow of burning gold”), and sometimes as the prominent repetition of a consonant (“after life’s fitful fever”).

27
Q

assonance

A

the repetition, in words of proximity, of 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 (fail/feel, rough/roof, pitter/patter). Sometimes consonance is more loosely defined as the repetition of a consonant (fail/peel).

29
Q

onomatopoeia

A

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

30
Q

couplet

A

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

31
Q

triplet

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 a quatrain.

4

35
Q

blank verse

A

English poetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter.

36
Q

free verse

A

rhythmical lines varying in length, adhering to no fixed metrical pattern, and usually unrhymed. Seems formless but is not. Form or pattern often largely based on 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 lyric is set in the present, catching a speaker in a moment of expression.

38
Q

elegy

A

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

39
Q

ode

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.