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  1. Poetic Device s (Definitions with Examples ) and Rhyme Page 3 Types of Metaphor Dead metaphor (to be avoided): common usage makes you forget that the two items being compared are really separate items. Example: “…leg of the table.” “…hear t of the matter.” Extended metaphor: this type of metaphor is developed over several lines of ...

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  2. Rhyme: This is the one device most commonly associated with poetry by the general public. Words that have different beginning sounds but whose endings sound alike, including the final vowel sound and everything following it, are said to rhyme. Example: time, slime, mime Double rhymes include the final two syllables.

  3. melissakoroleff.weebly.com › uploads › 7/1/7Poetic Devices Handout

    Poetic Devices Motif- a reoccurring theme, idea, subject, etc. in writing, music, or art Ex: Many African American poems have motifs of freedom, slavery, hope, and oppression etc. Ex: Many of Shakespeare’s motifs are love, death, and revenge Repetition - restating an idea, theme, word, etc. in order to better prove a point

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  5. Poetic Devices Glossary Basic Terms connotation: the implied or suggested meaning connected with a word denotation: the dictionary meaning of a word literal meaning: limited to the simplest, ordinary, most obvious meaning figurative meaning: associative or connotative meaning; representational meter: measured pattern of rhythmic accents in a ...

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  6. Poetic DEVICES Alliteration: repetition of the initial (first) sounds Example: Penny poured some pink punch into a purple cup. Meter: a fixed pattern of stressed and ...

  7. Both evocation and exposition are essential to effective poetic communication. When crafting poems, poets evoke and expose meaning, in part, by means of the following Poetic Elements: Music – Meaningful poems are pleasing to the ear. Poets use Sound Devices to interpose music into their poems.

  8. Poetic Device playing with sound. Example in the song, rhyme, or poem. alliteration. To use the same sound over and over again. rhyme. Using words that sound alike. onomatopoeia. A word that sounds ike the word it represents, like “Boom!” or “Bang!”.

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