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Blue Poetic-Devices-Glossary CI FINAL2
Blue Poetic-Devices-Glossary CI FINAL2
Figurative Language
metaphor: comparison between essentially unlike things, or the application of a name or description to
something to which it is not literally applicable
Example: “[Love] is an ever fixed mark, / that looks on tempests and is never shaken.”
metonymy: a word or phrase that replaces the name of an object or concept for another to which it is
related
Example: “We have always remained loyal to the crown” instead of “We have always remained loyal to the
monarchy.”
oxymoron: a combination of two words, phrases or concepts that appear to contradict each other
Example: bittersweet
paradox: a situation or phrase that appears to be contradictory but which contains a truth worth consider-
ing
Example: “In order to preserve peace, we must prepare for war.”
personification: the endowment of inanimate objects or abstract concepts with animate or living qualities
Example: “Time let me play / and be golden in the mercy of his means”
pun: play on words, or a humorous use of a single word or sound with two or more implied meanings;
quibble
Example: “They’re called lessons . . . because they lessen from day to day.”
simile: comparison between two essentially unlike things using words such as “like,” “as,” or “as though”
Example: “My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun”
allusion: a reference to a person, event, or work outside the poem or literary piece
Example: “Shining, it was Adam and maiden”
imagery: word or sequence of words representing a sensory experience (visual, auditory, olfactory, tactile,
and gustatory)
Example: “bells knelling classes to a close” (auditory)
irony: a contradiction of expectation between what is said and what is meant (verbal irony) or what is ex-
pected in a particular circumstance or behavior (situational), or when a character speaks in ignorance of a
situation known to the audience or other characters (dramatic)
Example: “Time held me green and dying / Though I sang in my chains like the sea”
Poetic Forms
heroic couplet: a pair of rhymed lines in iambic pentameter (tradition of the heroic epic form)
open: poetic form free from regularity and consistency in elements such as rhyme, line length, and metrical
form
stanza: unit of a poem often repeated in the same form throughout a poem; a unit of poetic lines (“verse
paragraph”)
cacophony: harsh or discordant sounds, often the result of repetition and combination of consonants with-
in a group of words. Writers frequently use cacophony to express energy or mimic mood.
slant rhyme: (off rhyme, half rhyme, imperfect rhyme): rhyme formed with words with similar but not whol-
ly identical sounds
Example: barn / yard