1.
aka: slat rhyme
ex- stone and one
2.
alliteration: repetition of initial consonant sounds (silken sad)
3.
approximate rhyme: final sounds are similar, not exact
4.
assonance: repetition of vowel sounds (molten, golden notes)
5.
but they must provide: clues to the meaning
6.
composed of: one accented syllable and one or more unaccented
7.
consonance: repetition of internal consonant sounds (uncertain rustling)
8.
end rhyme: rhyme occurs at the end of lines
9.
ex: a Shakespeare sonnet: ababcdcdefefgg
10.
exact rhyme: a repetition of vowels and all succeeding consonant sounds
11.
example: whisper
12.
example:: "Jabberwocky" by Lewis Carroll 'Twas brillig
13.
example:quatrain: a four-lined stanza
14.
foot: basic measure of rhythm
15.
gives a line of poetry: rhythm
16.
internal rhyme: rhyme occurs within the lines
17.
meter: regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables
18.
onomatopoeia: a word that imitates or suggest the sound it describes
19.
parallelism: repetition of phrases or sentences so repeated parts are alike in structure or meaning
20.
repetition: the repeating of sounds , letters, words or lines to help give poetry meaning, form and sound
21.
represented by: lower case letters by each sound
22.
rhyme scheme: the pattern or sequence in which rhyme occurs
23.
rhythm: pattern created by arranged stressed and unstressed syllables
24.
sound devices: as with music, they transmit ideas and emotions
not mere decoration; chosen to create emotion
25.
stanza: a group of lines forming a unit of poetry
26.
word invention: poets often create words to achieve startling effects