AP Lit: How to Read Poetry Like a Professor Test

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What is Terza Rima?

"third rhyme" (rhyming words occur 3 times) an interlocking rhyme, where the second line rhyme becomes the first/third line rhyme in the next stanza

What are the three rules?

1. Read the words 2. Read ALL the words 3. Read sentences

What are three things poetry does?

1. seeks to explore our deepest thoughts, feelings, and experiences 2. create intensity 3. helps us look at the world in a new way

How many lines are in a sonnet?

14

What is the structure of a rondeau?

15 lines divided unevenly between 3 stanzas

How many lines does a villanelle have?

19

couplet

2 lines, often rhyming

tercet

3 lines

What is a haiku?

3 lines, 5-7-5 syllables, two images juxtaposed

quatrain

4 lines, most commonly used

quintain

5 lines, very rare

sestet

6 lines

rime royal

7 lines

What is a triolet?

8 lines with the wording of line 1 repeated in lines 4 and 7, and the wording of line 2 repeated in line 8

octave

8 lines, rhyme scheme = ABABABCC

spenserian stanza

9 lines, rhyme scheme = ABABBCBCC

Rule number four says to ignore lines on first reading. Why are lines enemies of meaning?

They cause us to pause...only pause for punctuation, not ends of lines!

Foster writes that we should think of diction as the 5Ws of journalism. What are the questions we should be asking?

Who, what, where, when, why

What is a prose poem?

a body of poetry that has no lines

Define simile.

a comparison using "like" or "as"

Define metaphor.

a comparison without using "like" or "as"

What is a stanza?

a grouping of lines that will be repeated throughout the poem

What is an elegy?

a poem memorializing someone recently deceased

What is the "sound of sense"?

a poem should have a certain sound that conveys a sense of what is being said

What is ekphrastic poetry?

a poem that strives to capture an object or scene

What is a metrical foot?

a repeatable pattern of stresses

What is end rhyme?

a rhyme at the end of a line

What is an independent clause?

a sentence that can stand on its own

What is assonance?

a series of uses of the same vowel sound in close proximity

What is consonance?

a series of words in close proximity employing the same or related sounds

What is alliteration?

a series of words in succession all beginning with the same sound

What are liquid sounds?

a vowel-like consonant due to the tongue partially closing

What is a participle?

adds an 'ing' to make a verb a noun or adjective

What is another way to create rhythm?

alliteration

What is a conceit?

an extended metaphor

What is a symbol?

an object, action, or phrase that stands for something beyond itself

What is an enjambed line? How do you treat it when reading poetry?

an unpunctuated line-end; treat it like it's nothing, keep reading smoothly

What is blank verse?

an unrhymed verse

Where can consonance appear in words?

anywhere

For most of its history, English poetry has been built on a foundation of lines that in turn...

are built out of words arranged to form rhythmic patterns

How is blank verse different from free verse?

blank verse still follows the poetic conventions

What is one cause of a poem's vertical arrangement?

causes the poem to last longer

What four forms of punctuation make you pause?

commas, colons, semicolons, dashes

What is a kenning?

compound nouns that describe a third thing

What are nasal consonants?

consonants that cause us to push air out of our nostrils when we say them (m or n)

What is a prepositional phrase?

contains a preposition and its object

"Line breaks introduce ______."

drama

What is iambic pentameter?

five iambs laid end to end to make a line (five metrical feet)

What is common measure?

four metrical feet in lines one/three three metrical feet in lines two/four

What is tetrameter?

four metrical feet per line

"Meter isn't law, it's ___________."

framework

Define an ode.

great length, serious tone/subject, formal structure

What should you do with stresses when you read a poem? Why?

ignore them because they will make their sound naturally

What is a caesura?

indicates some sort of break in the middle of a line

What are strophes?

irregular divisions in stanzas

What is a masculine ending?

last syllable of a line is stressed

What is a feminine ending?

last syllable of a line is unstressed

What is one critical difference between poetry and prose?

lines

What is the basic tension of poetry?

meaning lies in words, melody in sounds

What is an iamb?

metrical foot composed of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable

How long is a stanza?

no more than 10 lines

What is the name of a 10-line stanza?

no name

Define dactyl.

one stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables

Whatever the form, the poem will be aimed at giving readers some sort of ___________.

pleasure

Rhyme is not _________.

poetry

What is "closed form poetry"?

poetry with really strict rules

Rule number five: Obey all ___________, including its _________.

punctuation, absence

What three forms of punctuation make you stop?

question marks, exclamation marks, periods

What is the basic concept of reading that remains intact while reading poetry?

read from a capital letter to the first following period

What is one last rule?

read it again

What is one obvious example of a way to create rhythm in a poem?

repetition

Define internal rhyme.

rhymes within lines

What is an identical rhyme?

rhyming something by using repetition

"When we assume that the said personage is the poet" while talking/writing about a poem, we "______________________________"

run the risk of missing the point

Virtually all poems are written in ____________. The policy to follow is to _____ ___ ____________.

sentences, read the sentences

What is the structure of a sestina?

six 6 line stanzas

What is a verset?

small verses

When we discuss poems, we refer to __________ rather than _____________.

speakers, narrators

What is prosody?

the broader study of technical matters involving meter and form

What is poetic license?

the freedom we give poets to abuse grammar and word order rules in order to achieve a desired effect

How is page placement just as much part of rhythm as the pattern of the words?

the pauses caused by spatial leaps help us to slow down and serve as a form of punctuation

Define diction.

the words, modes of phrasing, and use of figurative language

Why are poems easier to talk about than define?

there are so many exceptions

What is a lyric poem?

they are relatively short and slightly musical

What is a narrative poem?

they tell a story

What is meant by semantic level of words?

thinking in terms of meaning

What is meant by syntactic level of words?

thinking in terms of words' relationships with each other

Define anapest.

three-syllable foot; two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed

What does it mean to "own your reading"?

to be confident in your own interpretations because everyone's will be different

Define spondee.

two stressed syllables in a row

An elegy is a _____ rather than a _____.

type, form

Define idiosyncratic.

unique to an individual

free verse

verse where there is no regular metrical pattern

Why should poems be read aloud?

we will learn to feel the poetry

What is sprung rhythm?

when a poet moves stresses onto syllables or words not normally stressed, which achieves idiosyncratic effects

What is feminine rhyme?

when two or more syllables rhyme

What is scansion?

where the stresses fall in lines of poetry

A good way to think of figurative language is to think of the devices as...

word-pictures

What matters most in metrical counting?

words don't matter, syllables do

What is onomatopoeia?

words that sound like things they describe


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