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Poetry. Vocabulary. 100’s of free ppt’s from www.pptpoint.com library. Alliteration : Repetition of initial consonant sounds Allusion : A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art Ballad : A song-like poem that tells a story Blank Verse :
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Poetry Vocabulary • 100’s of free ppt’s from www.pptpoint.com library
Alliteration: • Repetition of initial consonant sounds • Allusion: • A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or work of art • Ballad: • A song-like poem that tells a story • BlankVerse: • Poetry written in unrhymed, ten-syllable lines
ConcretePoem: • A poem with a shape that suggests its subject • FigurativeLanguage: • Writing that is not meant to be taken literally • FreeVerse: • Poetry not written in a regular rhythmical pattern or meter • Haiku: • A three-lined Japanese verse
Image: • A word or phrase that appeals to one or more of the five senses • LyricPoem: • Highly musical verse that expresses the observations and feelings of a single speaker • Metaphor: • A figure of speech in which something is described as though it were something else
Mood: • The feeling created in the reader by a literary work • NarrativePoem: • A story told in verse • Onomatopoeia: • The use of words that imitate sounds • Personification: • A type of figurative language in which a non-human subject is given human characteristics
Refrain: • A regularly repeated line or group of lines in a poem • Repetition: • The use, more than once, of any element of language • Rhyme: • Repetition of sounds at the end of words • RhymeScheme: • A regular pattern of rhyming words in a poem
Rhythm: • Pattern of beats or stresses in spoken or written language • Simile: • A figure of speech that uses like or as to make a direct comparison between two unlike ideas • Stanza: • A formal division of lines in a poem considered as a unit My love is like a red rose.
Poetry Humor & Poetry
Humor • Humor in poetry can arise from a number of sources: • Surprise • Exaggeration • Bringing together of unrelated things • Most funny poems have two things in common: • Rhythm • Rhyme
Using more spirited language makes humorous situations even more humorous “The Porcupine” By Ogden Nash Any hound a porcupine nudges Can’t be blamed for harboring grudges. I know one hound that laughed all winter At a porcupine that sat on a splinter. Rhythm & Rhyme
If you take away the rhythm and rhyme, the humor vanishes. Any hound that touches a porcupine Can’t be blamed for holding a grudge I know one hound that laughed all winter long At a porcupine that sat on a piece of wood
Lewis Carroll1832-1898 • Born in England • Wrote Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland • Wrote Through the Looking Glass • His life was quiet and uneventful, but in works like Father William, he found escape from his serious work into a delightfully zany, topsy-turvy world that still amuses children old and young.
“Father William”Page 400 • In this poem, a young man questions his father about some rather unusual behavior. • Have you ever asked someone what they were doing and received an explanation that made very little sense at all?
Limericks • A limerick is a poem of five lines • The first, second, and fifth lines have three rhythmic beats and rhyme with one another. • The third and fourth lines have two beats and rhyme with one another. • They are always light-hearted, humorous poems.
Limericks There once was a man with no hair. He gave everyone quite a scare. He got some Rogaine, Grew out a mane, And now he resembles a bear!
Limerick About a Bee I wish that my room had a floor, I don’t care so much for a door. But this walking around Without touching the ground Is getting to be quite a bore.
Another Limerick There once was a very small mouse Who lived in a very small house, The ocean’s spray Washed it away, All that was left was her blouse!
You will create a limerick similar to this one… There once was a man from Beijing. All his life he hoped to be King. So he put on a crown, Which quickly fell down. That small silly man from Beijing.
Fill in the blanks and create your own Limerick. There once was a _____ from _____. All the while she/he hoped ________. So she/he ____________________, And ________________________, That _________ from ___________.
Mrs. Smith’s Limerick: There once was a man from Japan. All the while he hoped for a tan. So he lay on the beach, And ate a ripe peach, That came from a Georgia van.