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THIS

IS

With

Host...

Your

100 100 100 100 100

200 200 200 200 200

300 300 300 300 300

400 400 400 400 400

500 500 500 500 500

Figures of Speech:

Definitions

Literary Terms:

Definitions

Poetic Devices:

Definitions

Poetic Forms

Identifying Poetic

Devices

Identifying Literary Devices

100 100

200

300

400

500

A comparison between two unlike things using the words LIKE or AS.

A 100

What is a simile?

Ex: My love is as boundless as the sea; Her eyes sparkled

like diamonds

A 100

A comparison between two unlike things WITHOUT using

words such as like or as.

A 200

What is a metaphor?

*A metaphor says that one thing IS another thing.

Ex. It is the East, and Juliet is the sun.

A 200

The giving of human qualities to an inanimate object,

animal, or idea.

A 300

What is personification?

Ex. The house’s walls breathed with every gust of wind.

A 300

An indirect reference to a famous person, place, historical

event, or literary work.

A 400

What is an allusion?

Ex. He is our local Paul Revere.

A 400

A 500

A statement whose two parts seem

contradictory yet make sense with more thought and hold

significance.

What is paradox?

Ex. I must be cruel to be kind. I can resist anything but

temptation.

A 500

An author’s attitude about the subject as

demonstrated through his word choice (diction)

B 100

What is tone?

B 100

The attitude that the reader develops from the passage as

influenced by the author’s diction.

B 200

What is mood?

B 200

Purposeful word choice. The specific words are chosen for either a special emphasis or

connotation.

B 300

What is diction?

Ex. We romped until the pans Slid from the kitchen shelf

*Romped is an example of diction because it has a positive and playful connotation. Romped means to play around in a lively

manner.

B 300

The dictionary definition of a word.

B 400

What is denotation?

Ex. Cheater: a person or thing who cheats.

B 400

The feelings/emotions associated with a word.

B 500

What is connotation?

Ex. Cheater: negative connotation

B 500

A pattern of end rhymes in a poem. Each rhyme is

assigned a letter of the alphabet starting with a.

Lines that rhyme are given the same letter.

C 100

What is the rhyme scheme?

Ex. Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, a And sorry I could not travel both b And be one traveler, long I stood a And looked down one as far as I could a To where it bent in the undergrowth b

C 100

Words that sound like their meaning.

C 200

What is the onomatopoeia?

Ex. swoosh, zip, click, zoom, pop, crackle

C 200

Approximate rhyme; occurs when poets

attempt to rhyme words that simply do not rhyme

exactly.

C 300

What is the slant rhyme?

Ex. What immortal hand or eye / Could frame thy fearful symmetry?

C 300

DAILY DOUBLE

C 400

DAILY DOUBLE

Place A Wager

Repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings

of words.

C 400

What is alliteration?

Ex. Which circle slowly with a silken swish

C 400

The same expression (word or words) is

repeated at the beginning of two or more lines in a

sequence.

C 500

What is anaphora?

Ex. It was the best of times, It was the worst of times, It was the age of wisdom,

It was the age of foolishness,

C 500

A form of poetry that does not use any consistent

meter patterns, rhyme, or any other musical pattern.

D 100

What is free verse?

D 100

A poem in which the poet uses a visible shape to

create a picture related to the poem’s subject.

D 200

What is concrete poem?

D 200

A fourteen-line poem written in iambic

pentameter and follows the rhyme scheme: ABAB

CDCD EFEF GG.

D 300

What is a Shakespearean Sonnet?

D 300

D 400

A line of poetry that consists of five pairs of alternated stressed and

unstressed syllables.

What is iambic pentameter?

Ex. But soft! What light through yonder window breaks?

D 400

D 500

The structure of a Shakespearean sonnet.

What is three quatrains and a rhyming couplet?

What is the Volta?

D 500

E 100

Identify an

example of

repetition.

What is “He will keep telling jokes”?

E 100

E 200

Identify the line

that starts the

Volta.

E 200

What is “And yet, by heaven, I think my love as

rare”?

E 300

Explain the importance of the line “American but

hyphenated” in connection to how the speaker feels.

Also, find an example of alliteration.

E 300

What is the speaker will always be seen as

Mexican-American, not just solely American or

solely Mexican?

What is “definitely different”?

E 400

Identify three

examples of

anaphora.

E 400

What is:able to slip from “How’s life?”

to “Me’stan volviendo loca,”

able to sit in a paneled office

drafting memos in smooth English,

able to order in fluent Spanish

at a Mexican restaurant,

viewed by Anglos as perhaps exotic,

perhaps inferior, definitely different,

viewed by Mexicans as alien,

by smiling

by masking the discomfort

E 500

Identify the

rhyme scheme.Hint: There is slant rhyme in

this poem.

E 500

What is ABBAABBACDCDCD?

Slant Rhyme: “Grace” and “day’s”

F 100

Find the simile.

F 100

What is “Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be

gay”?

F 200

Find examples of diction

that have a negative

connotation.

F 200

What is “reeks” and “treads”?

F 300

Find an example of

personification.

F 300

What is “Their frail deeds might have danced in a green

bay”?

F 400

Provide a tone word

for this poem and

an explanation why.

F 400

What is the speaker is resentful, angry, annoyed because she is constantly

judged by both the American and

Mexican cultures?

F 500

Find 3 example

s of paradox.

F 500

What is “dark is right,” “sad height,” “Curse, bless,” and

“blinding sight”?

The Final Jeopardy Category is:

Poetry Analysis

Please record your wager.

Click on screen to begin

Click on screen to continue

1. Identify the poetic form?

2. Find an example of:

PersonificationOnomatopoeia

Alliteration

What is free verse?

Personification: “Any meal is dangerous / but they fear breakfast most.”

Onomatopoeia: “whirring”

Alliteration: “that destroyer of dozens”

Click on screen to continue

Thank You for Playing Jeopardy!

Good luck on your exam!

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