Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Rhyme

Rhyme: the same sound in the end of a verse in a poem
Ex:

Friendz

© Kayla Coffey
Opposites
I say yes and you say no
I say bye and you say hello
Butterfly's fly and penguins swim
Professionals lie and adventures go on whim
If you go up I go down
An emo to a happy clown
Girlie girls pink and fat ones brown
Smiles right side up and frowns up side down
A rainbow to a black plain thing
A monotone to an opera sing
A rainy cloud to a sunny day
Bright colors and something gray
A beginning to an ending
A broken heart and then something mending

The significance of rhyme in poetry is that it allows the reader to easily read the poem naturally with lots of flow. Not all poetry has rhyming in it but when rhyming is present in poetry it creates a beautiful arrangement of words that the poet created. Without rhyming in poetry a major part of poetry would be taken out and the ease of speaking naturally would be gone as well.

Ex:

Rhythm

Rhythm: movement or pattern of a beat in a poem
Ex:

Music Of My Life

© Kacey Storm
The music takes my soul
Takes it through the wind, and around the autumn trees
As the earth turns slowly
Each song, makes me wonder what really goes on while I'm asleep.
As a disco ball shines through my dreams.
I wish I was awake, as the music plays.
And wished instead of school, I'd get to party and dance all day.
As one song makes you move, and happy
The other makes you cry, and sappy.
Each song with its own act,
Life reacts back.
As each tune, makes you
the way you are
That's why I'm kind of bizarre.
It's hard to believe your song,
is more than just a song
Or a bell is more than a bell.
And a voice, could be as bad as hell
You could lose your soul
Regain it again, each feeling fills you full
As each tune tells you what to do.
Nothing is better than the feeling of the music's 'tude.

The significance of rhythm in a poem is that it makes the words flow with an ease of speaking. Without rhythm in a poem there wouldn't be that natural flow of speaking that we usually speak with. If you took out rhythm in poetry you wouldn't be able to make a poem that people would understand easily because rhythm helps people decode the poets message.

Ex:

Thursday, May 24, 2012

onomatopoeia

Onomatopoeia: words in poetry that sounds the same as it being said.
Ex:

Mom & Dad Are Home

Slam! Slam!
Go the car doors.
Jangle! Jangle!
Go the house keys.
Jiggle! Jiggle!
Go the keys in the door.
Squeak!
Goes the front door!
Thump! Thump!
That is me running down the stairs.
Guess what?
Mom and Dad are home!!
Onomatopoeia is important in poems because you can give words the same sound as the action. Also, adding creative words that sound the same as they are said really gets you thinking about about what the poem is trying to say.

Ex:

Personifaction

Personifaction: giving a person that isn't a human a human's features.

Ex:

The signifigance of personifaction in poetry is important because you are describing a non-human a regular human's features which makes reading poetry very interesting and creative. Without personification animals or plants or objects wouldn't be able to talk like humans or act like humans. Also, it makes reading poetry very fun and you are actually motivated to read the poem.

Ex:

Dinnertime Chorus

The teapot sang as the water boiled
The ice cubes cackled in their glass
the teacups chattered to one another.
While the chairs were passing gas
The gravy gurgled merrily
As the oil danced in a pan.
Oh my dinnertime chorus
What a lovely, lovely clan!

Imagery

Imagery: words in a poem that uses the five senses connecting you to tactile(touching), auditory(hearing), olfactory(smelling), visual(sight), gustatory(taste), organic(anger), and kinestetic(sensing something).

Ex:

Smell

Oh strong-ridged and deeply hollowed
nose of mine! what will you not be smelling?
What tactless asses we are, you and I, boney nose,
always indiscriminate, always unashamed,
and now it is the souring flowers of the bedreggled
poplars: a festering pulp on the wet earth
beneath them. With what deep thirst
we quicken our desires
to that rank odor of a passing springtime!
Can you not be decent? Can you not reserve your ardors
for something less unlovely? What girl will care
for us, do you think, if we continue in these ways?
Must you taste everything? Must you know everything?
Must you have a part in everything?
William Carlos Williams
 
Imagery is important in poetry because you can actually think you are in that situation. Also, without imagery reading poetry would be dull and you wouldn't be able to describe things with creative language. Without imagery poetry wouldn't be known as creative writing because there wouldn't be anything creative about it.
 
Ex:

Simile

Simile: a sentence in a poem that compares an object with another object using like or as.

Ex: My bright yellow shoes are as bright as the sun.

Simile's are important beacuse you can describe an object through figurative language in a more creative way. Without simile's your poetry and writing would be completely boring and you wouldn't be able to describe two objects through a creative way.

Ex:

Friday, May 18, 2012

Repetition

Repetition: repeating the same line or phrase over and over again in a poem

Ex:I'm nobody! Who are You?
I'm nobody! Who are you?
Are you nobody too?
Then there's a pair of us-don't tell!
They'd banish us you know.

How dreary to be somebody!
how public, like a frog.
To tell your name livelong day
To an admiring bog!

Repetition in poetry is important because every time the poet repeats the same line again the poet is trying to send a message that the repeating line is the message of the poem. Also, this type of poem can actually help people understand the message better beacsue it keeps on repating the same line.

Ex:Rain
The rain is falling all around
It falls on field and tree,
It rains on the umbrellas here,
And on the ships at sea.

Robert Louis Stevenson
1850-1894