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| expresses vivid thoughts and feelings |
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| uses techniques of drama such as speaker and conflict tell a story |
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| the repetition of initial constant sounds. |
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| words that imitate sounds. |
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| an arranged pattern of rhythm in a line of verse |
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| -unrhymed poetry that has a regular rhythm and line length, especially iambic pentameter |
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the most common rhythm in English poetry, consisting of five iambs in each line.
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| an act of doing something again |
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| a regular pattern of rhyming words in s poem |
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- Simile-a figure of speech in which like or as is used to make a comparison between two basically unlike ideas
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- a figure of speech in which like or as is used to make a comparison between two basically unlike ideas
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| he use to describe somebody or something of a word or phrase that is not meant literally but by means of a vivid comparison expresses something about him, her, or it, e.g. saying that somebody is a snake |
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| -writing or speech that appeals to one or more sense |
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| -an embodiment or perfect example of something |
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| he figurative language, especially metaphors and similes, used in poetry, plays, and other literary work |
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| a form of Japanese poetry with 17 syllables in three unrhymed lines of five, seven, and five syllables, often describing nature or a season |
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| -a short poem with 14 lines, usually ten-syllable rhyming lines, divided into two, three, or four sections. There are many rhyming patterns for sonnets, and they are usually written in iambic pentameter. |
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| -two lines of verse that form a unit alone or as part of a poem, especially two that rhyme and have the same meter |
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| a verse of poetry consisting of four lines, especially one with lines that rhyme alternately |
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