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Having Fun with Poetry

Having Fun with Poetry. Exploring four different types of short structured poetry. Today we’re going to be looking at:. Limerick Haiku Acrostic Diamante Vocabulary. Limerick. Five Lines One couplet One Triplet a a b b a rhyme pattern Funny – contains a punch line.

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Having Fun with Poetry

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  1. Having Fun with Poetry Exploring four different types of short structured poetry.

  2. Today we’re going to be looking at: Limerick Haiku Acrostic Diamante Vocabulary

  3. Limerick Five Lines One couplet One Triplet a a b b a rhyme pattern Funny – contains a punch line

  4. Notice the rhyme pattern - A flea and a fly in a flue a Were caught, so what could they do? a Said the fly, “Let us flee.” b “Let us fly,” said the flea. b So the flew through a flaw in the flue. a - Anonymous

  5. Notice the distinctive beat pattern? It is just as important as the rhyme. Try completing this limerick - The once was a pauper name Meg Who accidently broke her ________. She slipped on the ____________. Not once, but thrice Take no pity on her, I ___________.

  6. Listen carefully to the beat and rhyme patterns in this limerick. The Man from Peru

  7. Haiku From Japanese culture Meaningful yet compact Everyday things Nature, feelings, experiences Three lines 5 syllables, 7 syllables, five syllables. No rhyme

  8. A Haiku must paint a mental image. The challenge is to put the poem’s meaning and imagery in the reader’s mind in only 17 syllables and 3 lines. Examples The Rose By Donna Brock The red blossom bends And drips its dew to the ground. Like a tear it falls A Rainbow By Donna Brock Curving up, then down, Meeting blue sky and green earth Melding sun and rain.

  9. Acrostic From the Greek words acros (outermost) and stichos (line of poetry).

  10. How to create your own Acrostic - Write the first name of someone you admire. Think about how to describe that person and what they mean to you. One scratch paper, write out your ideas. Proofread. Revise. Using word processing program, type the letter that will form your acrostic (the person’s name). We will change the color of the font to make your first letters a different color than the rest of your poem. Capitalize them and make them bold. Align the poem. Find or draw a picture of the person you described to illustrate you acrostic.

  11. Example -

  12. Diamante A poem that in formatted to create a diamond shape.

  13. How to create a Diamante poem- You need – A subject Two adjectives describing the subject Three words ending in “ing” telling about the subject Four words (the first two describe the subject the last two describe it opposite) Three words ending in “ing” telling about the opposite Two adjectives describing the opposite An opposite

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