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the repetition of consonant beginning sounds |
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a indirect reference to a well-know character, place. or situation form history, music, art, or another work of literature |
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a speaker addresses an inanimate object, an idea, or absent person |
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the repetition of same or similar vowel sounds |
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the suggested or implied meanings associated with a word beyond its dictionary definition, or denotation |
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the repetition of consonant sounds typically within or at the end or words that do not rhyme and preceded by different vowel sounds |
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two consecutive paired lines of poetry usually rhyming and often forming a stanza |
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the literal. or dictionary, meaning of a word |
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a writer's choice of words, an important element in the writer's voice or style |
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the rhyming of words at the ends of lines |
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a literary work in which all or mist of the characters, settings and events stand for ideas, qualities or figures beyond themselves |
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the continuation of a sentence or phrase from one line of a poem to the next without a pause between the lines |
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a short usually simple tale that teaches a moral and somethings uses animal characters |
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a specific device or kind of figurative language that are not literally true but express some truth beyond the literal level |
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poetry that has no fixed pattern of meter rhyme line length or stanza arrangement |
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a poem that has a prescribed pattern usually involving meter, rhyme, rhyme scheme and structure |
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a figure of speech that uses exaggeration |
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a rhyme that occurs within a line of poetry |
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a regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables that gives a line of poetry a predictable rhythm |
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a figure of speech that consists of the use of the name of one object or concept for that of another to which it is related, or of which it is a part |
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a figure of speech in which opposite ideas are combined |
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the use of a series of words, phrases, or sentences that have similar grammatical form |
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a situation or statement that appears to be contradictory but is actually true either in fact or in a figurative sense |
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a humorous play on words. they usually involve words that are similar in sound or a word that has several meanings |
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the repetition of the same stressed vowel sounds and any succeeding sounds in two or more words |
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the pattern that end rhymes form in a stanza or poem |
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writing that uses humor or wit to ridicule the vices or follies of people or societies often to bring about change or improvement |
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the analysis of the meter of a line of verse |
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it occurs when the sounds of words are similar but not identical |
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rhyme scheme-ababcdcdefefgg. consists of three quatrains, or four teen line stanzas followed by a couplet |
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14 lines divided into two stanzas, the eight-line octave and the six-line sestet. Responds to a question or situation posed by the octave. rhyme scheme: abbaabba-cde |
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the particular order or pattern a writer uses to present ideas |
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a figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole or the whole for part |
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the study of the rule for the formation of grammatical sentences in a language |
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language that makes something seen less important that it really is |
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the pattern of beats created by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables. |
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