Across
- 2. Rhyme that occurs within a line of poetry
- 3. Rhyme that occurs only at the ends of lines/ the pattern or sequence in which the rhyme occurs. The first sound is represented or designated as “a”, the second as “b”, and so on. When the first sound is repeated it is designated again as “a”.
- 5. Also known as near rhyme (or half rhyme, weak rhyme, or imperfect rhyme), these rhymes aren't quite… rhymes. They come close, but don’t make the cut.
- 7. Think of meter as a poem's underlying structure—the rhythm beneath the words in each line (made up of smaller beats called “feet”)- this answers the question- “how many” when dealing with “feet.”
- 8. A repetition of sounds in words or lines of verse
- 9. Lines of unrhymed iambic pentameter
Down
- 1. A metrical unit composed of stressed and unstressed syllables
- 2. A line of verse with five metrical feet consisting of an unstressed stressed unit pattern.
- 4. Words that look alike, but don't sound alike, like tough and bough or mint and pint.
- 6. A rhyme that sounds just like what it means. A perfect rhyme rhymes perfectly, as in cat and hat.
