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Practically Painless. Poetry project. Part One Collecting Poems. Read lots of poetry. Read some more. Find poems you love. Find poems that move you. Find poems that feel so familiar, they could have been written by YOU. Part One Collecting Poems. Find poems that use poetic devices.
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Practically Painless Poetry project By Stacy Upton with slides from Mrs. Renz
Part OneCollecting Poems • Read lots of poetry. • Read some more. • Find poems you love. • Find poems that move you. • Find poems that feel so familiar, they could have been written by YOU.
Part OneCollecting Poems Find poems that use poetic devices. • Simile • Metaphor • Hyperbole • Personification • Onomatopoeia • Alliteration Copy the poems and write the author’s name.
Six Poetic Devices Look for five of these six poetic devices in your poem search: • Simile • Hyperbole • Alliteration • Metaphor • Onomatopoeia • Personification
SIMILE • A comparison using like or as. • EXAMPLES: As brave as a lion, As dumb as an ox
METAPHOR • A figure of speech in which one thing is spoken as though it were something else, a direct comparison of two unlike things. • EXAMPLE: She had a cold heart.
PERSONIFICATION • Figurative language in which a nonhuman subject is given human characteristics • EXAMPLE: The wind spoke her name.
ONOMATOPOEIA • The use of words that imitate sounds. • Buzz, Thud, Hiss, Woof, Quack
ALLITERATION • Repetition of the same, initial consonant sounds
HYPERBOLE • A bold, deliberate overstatement not intended to be taken seriously. The purpose is to emphasize the truth of the statement. • EXAMPLES: He weighs a ton or I could eat a horse
OTHER POETRY TERMS • Rhyme • Repetition • Imagery • Stanza • Verse • Meter • Foot • Beat Poet • Slam • Spoken Word
RHYME • Word endings that sounds alike • Internal Rhyme – rhyme within a line • EXAMPLES: Time, Slime, Mime • Internal Rhyme – Scornfully scaly snake which held his very fate
REPETITION • The use, more than once, of any element of language – a sound, a word, a phrase, a clause, or a sentence. • EXAMPLE: By Edgar Allan Poe By the sinking or the swelling in the anger of the bells Of the bells Of the bells, bells, bells, bells
IMAGERY • Usually these words or phrases create a picture in the reader’s mind. Some imagery appeals to the other four senses (hearing, touch, taste, smell). • EXAMPLES: • Sight – smoke mysteriously puffed our from his ears • Sound – he could hear a faint but distant thump • Touch – the burlap wall covering scraped his skin • Taste – a salty tear ran down his cheek • Smell – the scent of cinnamon floated into his nostrils
Part TwoWriting Poems • Read the poem choices in your booklet. • Decide which five types you would like to write. • Write! Have fun!