English vocab

match the words to the definition or example that fits it best.1. Alliteration         2. Anaphora         3. Assonance         4. Auditor         5. Consonance6. Dramatic poem7. Iambic pentameter8. Lyric poem9. Metaphor10. Meter11. Metonymy12. Motif13. Narrative poem14. Occasional poem15. Poem16. Rhyme scheme17. Rhythm18. Silent Auditor19. Simile20. Situational poem21. Symbol22. Symbolism23. Synecdoche24.  Theme25. Tone26.Topic27. Narrator28. Blank verse29. Soliloquy30. Dramatic monologue31. True rhyme32. Slant rhyme33. Internal rhyme34. Enjambed35. End -stopped A. “Half a league, half a league/Have a league onward”B. A listener (could be a character in the poem or the audience)C. A comparison drawn between two things by using the word like or asD.  What is on the author’s mind at the time; may prompt his writing about that in some way; more than just the subjectE.  A.K.A. a type of historical poemF. “That valleys, groves, hills, and fields”G.  A direct comparison by calling one thing another (a sea of glass)H. Something that stands for something else (other than itself)I. The way stressed and unstressed syllables impact the flow of each line of poetryJ. “If these delights hy mind may move/Then live with me and be my love.”K. Usually short poems with a single, first-person speaker who speaks about his thoughts and feelingsL. A poem that has characteristics of a dramaM. When a line of poetry runs over to the next line before the grammatical (with punctuation) pauseN. Determined by the kind of foot (iambic, for example) and the number (pentameter)O. “The invisible worm/That flies in the night”P. Can change again and again as the poem moves alongQ. A poem that is about getting back to the simple country lifeR. “Puffs, powders, patches, bibles, billet-doux”S. Using a word associated with a thing to represent the thing itselfT. Having five metrical feet or ten syllables each foot in the form of unstressed-stressedU. “The Dews drew quivering and chill-”V. A poem that tells a storyW. Poetry written with no particular rhyme scheme, but often written in iambic pentameterX. “House like an engine that churns and stalls/House with skin and hair for walls”Y. A listener that the speaker understands will not be answering or speakingZ. When there is a grammatical pause marked by punctuation at the end of the line of poetryAA. The one who is telling the storyBB. Where the speaker is speaking to no one in particular, rather thinking aloud about something very deepCC. When the author uses part of something to represent the whole or vice versaDD. A recurring element or situation that can help explain the themeEE. “Thy gowns, they shoes, thy beds of roses/Thy cap, they kirtle, and thy posies”FF. A poem that revolves around one or more situations that may have one or more settings, tooGG. The pattern that end rhymes have, usually written with lower case letters representing each new rhyming wordHH. The central idea of a poem; is sometimes a moralII. “How sweet and fair she seems to be”

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