Poetry: Terms and Devices
Across
- 2. the pattern of sound createed by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line
- 5. rhyme that occurs at the end of a line of poetry
- 7. rhyme that occurs within a line of poetry
- 8. a figure of speech that makes a reference to a famous person, place, or thing in order to stimulate ideas, associations, and extra information in the reader's mind
- 10. the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings of words
- 11. the use of a word or phrase, such as "hiss" or "buzz," that imitates or suggests the sound of what it describes
- 13. the use of words, phrases, or sentences that have a similar grammatical form
- 15. a group of lines forming a unit
- 16. commonly used phrases that can be confusing because of their hidden meanings
- 17. a figure of speech that involves a gross overstatement in order to make a point
Down
- 1. descriptive language that appeals to the senses: sight, sound, touch, taste, or smell
- 3. a regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables which sets the overal rhythm of certain poems
- 4. attributes human characteristics to an animal, object, or idea
- 6. compares or equates seemingly unlike things, but does not use like or as
- 9. the pattern of the end rhymes that is designated by assigning a differnet letter of the alphabet to each new rhyme
- 12. the voice that talks to the reader
- 14. the repetition of vowel sounds within a line of poetry
- 15. figure of speech using a word such as like or as to compare seemingly unlike things
- 18. a word or row of words tht may or may not form a complete sentence