Introduction to Poetry and Sound Devices
Across
- 2. The beat or flow of a poem created by which syllables in the words are stressed or unstressed.
- 4. Rhymes that occur between words at the end of two lines of poetry, following the poem's rhyme scheme.
- 6. Rhymes that are inexact in sound or number of syllables.
- 8. The narrator of a poem.
- 10. Lines of poetry are sometimes called this.
- 11. The repetition of vowel sounds within two or more words in a sentence or a single line of poetry.
- 13. A word that sounds like what it is.
- 14. A form of writing that primarily aims to cause great emotion in the reader.
Down
- 1. The author or poet helps the reader visualize what is happening in their writing by appealing to the reader's senses: sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell.
- 2. The repetition of two or more words with similar sounding endings in a line of poetry. These similar sounding words also need to have the same number of syllables.
- 3. A single word or phrase is repeated at the beginning of sentences, lines, or clauses.
- 5. The use of letters to label the pattern of rhyming in a poem.
- 7. The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of two or more words in a sentence or a single line of poetry.
- 9. A group of lines in a poem.
- 12. The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning, middle, and/or end of two or more words in a sentence or a single line of poetry.