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Poetry Terms

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Couplet   is two successive lines of poetry, especially those of the same length, that rhyme. Often used in humorous poems because they pack a quick punch. Example: "Casey at the Bat" is written in four line stanzas consisting of two couplets in each.  
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Dactyl   is a metrical foot of three syllables, the first accented and the next two unaccented.  
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Heptameter   is a line of verse with seven (7) metrical feet.  
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Hexameter   is a line of verse with six (6) metrical feet.  
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Iamb   is a metrical foot of two syllables, the first unaccented and the second accented.  
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Ode   is a lyric poem addressed to a specific person or thing with lofty feeling, elaborate form, and dignified style.  
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Pentameter   is a line of verse with five (5) metrical feet.  
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Sonnet   is a poem of exactly fourteen (14) Iambic pentameter verses with a specific rhyme scheme (Italian, also known as Petrarchan, or British, also known as Shakespearean).  
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Spondee   is a metrical foot of two syllables, both accented.  
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Verse   is a single line of poetry  
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Ballad   A song or songlike poem that tells a story. Ballads usually tell stories of tragedy, love, or adventure, using simple language and a great deal of repitition. They generally have regular rhythm and rhyme patterns that make them easy to memorize.  
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Free verse   Poetry without a regular meter or rhyme scheme. Captures natural rhythms of ordinary conversing or unusual conversation. May use internal rhyme, repetition, alliteration, onomatopoeia, and other sound effects. Often use vivid imagery, metaphors & similes  
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Lyric poem   A poem that expresses the feelings or thoughts of a speaker rather than telling a story. Can express a wide range of feelings or thoughts. Usually short and imply, rather than directly state, a single strong emotion or idea.  
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Meter   A pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry. It is common practice to show this pattern in writing by using two symbols.  
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Poetry   A rhythmic, compressed language that uses figures of speech and imagery designed to appeal to our emotions and imagination. Usually arranged in lines. Often has a regular pattern of rhythm & may have regular rhyme scheme. lyric,narrative,epic,ballad.  
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Refrain   A repeated sound, word, phrase, line, or group of lines. Usually associated with songs & poems. Also used in speeches & other forms of literature. Often used to build rhythm. May also provide emphasis,commentary,create suspense,or help hold work together.  
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Rhyme   The repetition of accented vowel sounds and all sounds following them in words that are close together in a poem. Purposes include building rhythm,lending songlike quality,emphasizing ideas,organizing poems (ie stanzas or couplets), humor,pleasure,memory.  
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Rhythm   A musical quality produced by the repetition of stressed and unstressed syllables or by the repetition of certain other sound patterns. Rhythm occurs in all forms of language, both written & spoken, but is particularly important in poetry.  
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Speaker   The voice talking to us in a poem. The speaker is sometimes, not always, the poet. It is best to think of the voice in the poem as belonging to a character the poet has created. The character may be a child, a woman, a man, an animal, or even an object.  
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Stanza   A group of consecutive lines in a poem that form a single unit.In a poem it is something like a paragraph in prose:It often expresses a unit of thought.It may consist of a number of lines; even a single line.The word Stanza is italian for "stopping place"  
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Theme   The general idea or insight about life taht a work of literature reveals. A theme is not the same as a subject. Subject can usually be expressed in a word or two. Theme is idea or message the writer wishes to convey about the subject.  
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Tone   The attitude a writer takes toward his or her subject, characters, and audience. ie a writers tone might be humorous or passionate and sincere. When people speak, their tone of voice gives added meaning to what they say.  
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