poetry
Across
- 5. the musical quality produced by the repetition of stressed and unstressed syllables.
- 7. the voice that talks to the reader.
- 8. a comparison between two unlike things using like or as.
- 9. gives human traits to something that is non-human. (The word person in personification can help you remember what this word means.)
- 14. the repetition of consonant sounds either within or at the ends of words, as in the phrase wide muddy field.
- 16. when the rhythm is regular and repeats throughout the poem; arranged words that form patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables.
- 17. the repetition of vowel sounds in words, such as in stone and slow.
- 18. sometimes called hyperbole, is an overstatement used to emphasize a point or create humor.
- 20. The place where a line ends.
Down
- 1. are groups of lines.
- 2. the repetition of sounds at the end of words
- 3. language that helps a reader recreate, in his or her own mind, what the writer is describing. (Sensory details—smell, touch, sight, hearing, and taste.)
- 4. the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words.
- 6. poetry follow rules for lines, stanzas, rhythm, and rhyme.
- 10. verse contain irregular or sporadic patterns of rhythm and rhyme. This often sounds like everyday speech.
- 11. pattern of rhyme that repeats across the different stanzas.
- 12. a type of literature in which words are chosen and arranged in specific ways to create an effect. (Some poems tell stories, while others express emotions or paint pictures in words.)
- 13. refers to the way a poem is laid out on the page. This includes the poem’s lines, line breaks, stanzas, rhythm, and rhyme.
- 15. the use of words whose sounds echo their meanings.
- 19. a comparison between two unlike things without using like or as.