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What tools do poets use?. Poetic devices and their definitions. Tools. Poets use tools to add sound, rhythm, meaning, and emotional effect for the reader. Poets use their power of observation, previous experiences, and their emotions to create poetry. Other tools include:
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What tools do poets use? Poetic devices and their definitions
Tools Poets use tools to add sound, rhythm, meaning, and emotional effect for the reader. Poets use their power of observation, previous experiences, and their emotions to create poetry. Other tools include: • Rhyme and Rhyme scheme • Simile and Metaphor • Personification and Repetition • Alliteration and Onomatopoeia • Imagery and Symbols • Hyperbole and Exaggeration
Rhyme Words with the same ending sound. • Ex. Shy and hi
Rhyme scheme The pattern in which the rhyme occurs in a stanza or poem. • Ex. Bid me to weep, and I will weep, A While I have eyes to see; B And having none, yet I will keepAA heart to weep for thee. B
Simile The comparison of two unlike things by saying one is like, or as the other. • Ex. Sunshine, like hope aglow, Streams from heaven's sky Bringing smiles of warming grace On breeze whispers like a sigh. Sunshine is like a hope.
Metaphor The comparison of two unlike things by saying one is the other. • Ex. Clouds are ships in full sail Racing across the sky-blue sea Clouds are compared to ships.
Personification Giving human traits to non-human things incapable of having those traits. • Ex. Anger frowns and snarls, Sending bolts of fire from darkest night Frowning and snarling are human traits that anger cannot experience; however using them as traits for anger creates the desired imagery.
Repetition When one or more words are repeated to show urgency or importance. • Ex. Take all of your wasted honor Every little past frustration Take all of your so-called problems, Better put 'em in quotations Say what you need to say Say what you need to say Say what you need to say
Alliteration The repetition of a beginning sound. • Ex. Rain reigns roughly through the day. Raging anger from the skyIn the first two lines, the r sound is repeated.
Onomatopoeia The sound a thing makes. • Ex. Roaring with the pain Caused by flashing lightning strikes, Thunders yells, "Booooom! Craaaashhhh! Yeow!" Then mumbles, rumbling on its way. Grrrr, the lion's cry echoes Roaring, rumbling, cry are not examples of onomatopoeia, but are verb forms. Boooom, craaaashhh, yeow, and grrrrr are examples of onomatapoeia.
Imagery The use of words to create a mental picture. • Ex. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls He watches from his mountain walls The lines give you a vivid image of the scene. The poem is about a predatory bird roaming the sea for prey.
Symbols An ordinary object, event, animal, or person to which extraordinary meaning and significance is attached . • Ex. Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could To where it bent in the undergrowth; The wood and the roads are symbols; The roads are 'paths of life' and stand for choices to be made with reference to the 'course' of the traveler's life; the woods are life itself, and so on.
Hyperbole /Exaggeration An extreme exaggeration for effect. • Ex. Giants standing tall as mountains Giants aren't really tall as mountains, but the use of the exaggeration helps create the desired image.