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| lines that are arranged in groups |
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| likeness or sounds at end of words |
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| Rhyming words within a line |
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| use of words at the end of a line that rhyme's |
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| A pattern of end rhymes in a poem |
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| pattern of sounds created by the arrangement of syllables |
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| lines that have a repeated rhythmic patern |
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| repetition of constant sounds at the beginning of words |
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| Repetition of vowel sounds in non rhyming words |
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| repetition of consonant wounds within or at the end of words |
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| The use of a word that sounds like what they refer too |
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| the voice the relates the ideas or story of the poem |
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| language that appeal to the reader's sense of sight, hearing, smell, taste or touch |
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| ideas besides the ordinary, literal meaning of the word |
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| attribute of human qualities to an object, animals, or idea. |
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| A comparison indicated by the words like or as |
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| is a more direct comparison, as in this room is a war zone |
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| A poem that tell a story and is meant to be sung or recited |
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| is a logical guess or conclusion based on facts |
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| attitude a writer takes toward a subject |
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| is poetry that does not contain a regular pattern or rhyme and meter |
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| a metrical line of five feet, or units, each of which is made up of two syllables |
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| a short poem in which a single speaker expresses personal thoughts and feelings |
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| lyric poem of 14 lines, commonly written in iambic pentameter |
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| use of words for there auditor affect |
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