by: ansley ussery, hannah foster, andrew shaw, and micah rogers

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. By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

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Page 1: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

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By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and

Micah Rogers

Page 2: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Definition: The rhythm of a line of poetry is the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in the line. A regular pattern of rhythm is called meter.Example:

Chang McTang McQuarter Cat

Is one part this and twenty that

-John Ciardi

*from Chang McTang McQuarter Cat*

Page 3: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

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• A repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of the words

• Example: Carley’s crazy cat was captured!

Page 4: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

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• The repetition of similar sounds at the ends of words

• Example: Chang McTang McQuarter Cat

Is one part this, and ten parts that

He’s one part saint, and two parts sin

One part yawn, and three parts grin

-John Ciardi

Page 5: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

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A short, funny, poem usually with 5 lines in the pattern a-a-b-b-a

Example: A bugler named Dougal MacDougal

Found ingenious ways to be frugal

He learned how to sneezeIn various keysThus saving the price of a bugle. -Ogden Nash

Page 6: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

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• Poetry that presents the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker

• Example: I’m Nobody! Who are you?Are you–Nobody- too?Then there’s a pair of us!Don’t tell! They’d advertise-you

know

How dreary –to be-Somebody!How public-like a frog-To tell one’s name-the livelong JuneTo an admiring Bog! -Emily Dickinson

Page 7: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Definition: is the use of words whose sound suggests their meaning. The words bang and hiss are examples of onomatopoeia.

Example: when the glass plate fell on the floor , we all herd a huge “crash”!!!

http://www.makemovies.co.uk/curriculum/curriculum_images/bangcrash.gif

Page 8: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Definition: is the use of a sound, word, or phrase more than once to bring attention to that particular quality of whatever they are talking about.

http://www.jamb.ca/mt/photos/2004/repetition.jpg

Shadows on the wall

Noises down the hall

Life doesn’t frighten me at all

Bad dogs barking loud

Big ghosts in a cloud

Life doesn’t frighten me at all

By Mary Angeolou

Life Doesn’t Frighten Me

Page 9: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Definition: In poetry, a regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables-or a regular rhythm-is called meter. Although all poems have rhythm , not all poems have meter

Chang’ Mc Tang’ Mc Quar’ter Cat’

Is one’ part this’ and twen’ty that’By:John Ciardi, from: “Chang Mctang McQuarter Cat”

Page 10: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Definition: in a poem, the speaker is the voice that talks to the reader, like the narrator in a work of fiction. The speaker is not always the poet. He or she may be a character in the poem

http://www.eduplace.com/rdg/hmsv/6/handson/graphics/p100.jpg

In the poem, “The Windmill”by Longfellow the speaker is a windmill.

Page 11: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Concrete Poetry is apoem that tells a story in the shape of the story it is telling

Page 13: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

Haiku is a tradition of Japanese poetry.It is a 3 line poem.The first and third sentences contain 5 syllables,then in the 2 line it is a 7 syllables again.

Example:In my new clothing

I feel so different

I must

Look like someone else

By BASHO

Page 14: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

•A grouping of two or more lines within a poem.

“Change”

The summer

Still hangs

Heavy and sweet

With sunlight

As it did last year

The autumn

Still comes

Showering gold and crimson

As it did last year -Charlotte Zolotow

Page 15: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

•A rhymed pair of lines in a poem. “BARBARA FRIETCHIE”

Up from the meadows rich with corn,

Clear in the cool September morn,

By:John Greenleaf Whittier

(an example from the poem “Barbara Frietchie”)

Page 16: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

•Poetry without regular patterns of rhyme or rhythm

“How to Paint the Portrait of a Bird

When the bird comes

If it comes

Observe the deepest silence

Wait for the bird to enter the cage

By: Jacques Prèvert

Page 17: By: Ansley Ussery, Hannah Foster, Andrew Shaw, and Micah Rogers

•The arrangement of the poems words.