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| a form of literature identifiable by its shape on a page |
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| reference to a work of literature |
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| poetry that has numerous speakers |
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| patter of stressed and unstressed sllyables |
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| rhythmical pattern of a poem |
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| arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables |
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| 2 syllable foot with stress ont he second sllyable |
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| foot consists of three syllables with stress on the last |
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| stressed syllable followed by unstressed syllable |
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| three syllables with stressed on first |
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| conversation between characters |
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| attitude of writer towards the subject |
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| apparent meaning is opposite of the words that are said |
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| poetry that expresses feelings |
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| a resonable conclusion drawn by reader |
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| comparison using like or as |
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| comparison suggesting on thing is something else |
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| a metaphor that includes whole poem |
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| language that appeals to the senses |
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| object/action/word that means something beyond itself |
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| giving something human-like trait |
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| repeating consenant sounds |
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| words that sound like what they mean |
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| the use of similar gramatical structures in succeding lines |
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| words that rhyme within each line |
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| imitation of one poem by another |
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| does not end in a couplet; 2 stanzas; 7 and 7 or 6 and 8 |
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| Japanese poetry 5-7-5 syllables |
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| restate in one's own words |
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| has rhythm but no definate rhyme |
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