POETRY Terms Conclusion Notes Styles
Poetry Terms 1 .  onomatopoeia 2.  personification 3.  stanza  repetition free verse rhythm alliteration simile 9 .  rhyme 10. metaphor 11.  sensory image 12.  ballad 13.  narrative poem 14.  concrete poem 15.  hyperbole
Poetry Notes a literary form of writing   Poetry an expression of ideas and feelings in  compact, imaginative, and musical language include sensory images, figurative language, and sound devices presented in lines and stanzas
Elements of Poetry SOUND rhythm rhyme repetition
Elements of Poetry SHAPE Shapes of words create meaning Write in the shape  of an object eddieandbill uphill
Elements of Poetry IMAGE Vivid images through the senses  SIGHT TASTE SMELL TOUCH HEARING
Elements of Poetry IDEA Communicate feelings through ideas SOUND SHAPE IMAGES
Tools of Poetry Repetition of consonant sounds And sings a solitary song That whistles in the wind Peter Piper picked a peck of  Pickled peppers, etc. Alliteration
Onomatopoeia Imitates  a sound BOOM SCREECH Clang battleaxe, and  Clash brand! Let the  King reign. Tools of Poetry
SIMILE METAPHOR The comparison of two different things  using “like” or “as” As sharp as a tack As green as the grass A comparison  of two different things That is written in a direct statement All the world’s a stage He is a snake Tools of Poetry
ACROSTIC STYLES OF POETRY W histling, howling, whirling winds I n winter form icy crystals N ow a blanket of cold shrouds the earth, T rembling branches break, E erie sounds echo through the woods R eplying to the wind’s fury.
STYLES OF POETRY CINQUAIN Rain Wet  Moist  Slipping  Sliding  Gliding Moisture  for  God’s  creations Precipitation
Styles of Poetry HAIKU Snowflakes fall softly And form a beautiful world, A velvet blanket.
STYLES OF POETRY LIMERICK There once was a lady in Spain Who said she had nothing to gain. She gave it a try, And said she could fly. But crashed when she flew in the rain .
STYLES OF POETRY Rhyme and Rhythm Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village  though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. My little horse must think it queer To stop without a farmhouse near Between the woods and frozen lake The darkest evening of the year. He gives his harness bells a shake. To ask if there is some mistake. The only other sound’s the sweep Of easy wind and downy flake. The woods are lovely, dark, and deep But I have promises  to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening By Robert Frost
STYLES OF POETRY Five Sense Poem Success is red. It sounds like a vacant room. It feels like a pat on the back. It smells like flowers in the spring. It tastes as sweet as a mother’s kiss.
STYLES OF POETRY CONCRETE A raindrop dives from a cloud, patters on a roof, splashes into a puddle, bathes a car, nourishes a garden, slides down a rain barrel, hangs from a clothes line, perches on a flower petal, glistens like a diamond,  and dies in the  Sun.
CONCLUSION exciting and imaginative expression of ideas and feelings meter stanzas rhyme simile alliteration concrete haiku repetition ballad sonnet sound image shape couplet cinquain idea

Types of Poetry

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Poetry Terms 1. onomatopoeia 2. personification 3. stanza repetition free verse rhythm alliteration simile 9 . rhyme 10. metaphor 11. sensory image 12. ballad 13. narrative poem 14. concrete poem 15. hyperbole
  • 3.
    Poetry Notes aliterary form of writing Poetry an expression of ideas and feelings in compact, imaginative, and musical language include sensory images, figurative language, and sound devices presented in lines and stanzas
  • 4.
    Elements of PoetrySOUND rhythm rhyme repetition
  • 5.
    Elements of PoetrySHAPE Shapes of words create meaning Write in the shape of an object eddieandbill uphill
  • 6.
    Elements of PoetryIMAGE Vivid images through the senses SIGHT TASTE SMELL TOUCH HEARING
  • 7.
    Elements of PoetryIDEA Communicate feelings through ideas SOUND SHAPE IMAGES
  • 8.
    Tools of PoetryRepetition of consonant sounds And sings a solitary song That whistles in the wind Peter Piper picked a peck of Pickled peppers, etc. Alliteration
  • 9.
    Onomatopoeia Imitates a sound BOOM SCREECH Clang battleaxe, and Clash brand! Let the King reign. Tools of Poetry
  • 10.
    SIMILE METAPHOR Thecomparison of two different things using “like” or “as” As sharp as a tack As green as the grass A comparison of two different things That is written in a direct statement All the world’s a stage He is a snake Tools of Poetry
  • 11.
    ACROSTIC STYLES OFPOETRY W histling, howling, whirling winds I n winter form icy crystals N ow a blanket of cold shrouds the earth, T rembling branches break, E erie sounds echo through the woods R eplying to the wind’s fury.
  • 12.
    STYLES OF POETRYCINQUAIN Rain Wet Moist Slipping Sliding Gliding Moisture for God’s creations Precipitation
  • 13.
    Styles of PoetryHAIKU Snowflakes fall softly And form a beautiful world, A velvet blanket.
  • 14.
    STYLES OF POETRYLIMERICK There once was a lady in Spain Who said she had nothing to gain. She gave it a try, And said she could fly. But crashed when she flew in the rain .
  • 15.
    STYLES OF POETRYRhyme and Rhythm Whose woods these are I think I know. His house is in the village though; He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. My little horse must think it queer To stop without a farmhouse near Between the woods and frozen lake The darkest evening of the year. He gives his harness bells a shake. To ask if there is some mistake. The only other sound’s the sweep Of easy wind and downy flake. The woods are lovely, dark, and deep But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening By Robert Frost
  • 16.
    STYLES OF POETRYFive Sense Poem Success is red. It sounds like a vacant room. It feels like a pat on the back. It smells like flowers in the spring. It tastes as sweet as a mother’s kiss.
  • 17.
    STYLES OF POETRYCONCRETE A raindrop dives from a cloud, patters on a roof, splashes into a puddle, bathes a car, nourishes a garden, slides down a rain barrel, hangs from a clothes line, perches on a flower petal, glistens like a diamond, and dies in the Sun.
  • 18.
    CONCLUSION exciting andimaginative expression of ideas and feelings meter stanzas rhyme simile alliteration concrete haiku repetition ballad sonnet sound image shape couplet cinquain idea