Winter Program Dictionary
Winter Program Dictionary
Winter Program Dictionary
Dictionary
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Poetry Vocabulary List
Acrostic: A form of poem in which the first syllables of each line spell out a word, name,
or phrase.
Alliteration: Repeating the consonant sounds at the beginnings of nearby words, such as
the p sound in the words My puppy makes pizza in the poem My Puppy Makes
Pizza.
Anagram: A word or phrase created by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase.
For example, notes is an anagram of stone.
Ballad: A form of poetry, usually suitable for singing, that tells a story in stanzas of two
or four lines, and often has a refrain.
Close Rhyme: A rhyme of two words that are next to one another or close to one another,
such as Humpty Dumpty, tighty-whitey, fat cat, or fair and square.
Concrete Poem: A poem in which the meaning is conveyed by the placement and design
of the words on the page instead of, or in addition to, the usual arrangement of words.
Also sometimes called Visual Poetry.
Couplet: Two lines of poetry, one after the other, that rhyme and are of the same length
and rhythm. For example, I do not like green eggs and ham. / I do not like them Sam I
Am.
Epitaph: A short poem written about someone who has died, often inscribed on the
headstone of his or her grave. Epitaphs usually praise the person, and are sometimes
humorous.
Exaggeration: To overstate something or to claim that it is bigger, better, faster, smellier,
etc. than is actually true.
Form: A type of poem, written by following a set of rules such as the number of lines
or syllables, the placement of rhymes, etc.
Free Verse: A poetic form that avoids using fixed patterns of meter. Free verse often also
avoids rhymes, but still may make use of other poetic techniques such
as imagery and metaphor, as well as sound devices such as assonance and alliteration.
Haiku: A short, unrhymed Japanese poetic form with three lines of five syllables, seven
syllables, and five syllables.
Homonym: A word that has the same spelling and sound as another word, but a different
meaning. For example fine (an adjective meaning nice) and fine (a noun meaning
money you have to pay as a punishment) are homonyms.
Homophone: A word that has the same sound as another word, but a different spelling
and meaning. For example, there, their, and theyre are homophones.
Hyperbole: Pronounced hi-PER-buh-lee. An extreme and obvious exaggeration not
meant to be believed or taken literally. For example, he has million-dollar hair or this
test is taking forever.
Imagery: Language and poetic techniques used to create mental pictures and cause
emotions in the reader.
Limerick: A humorous 5-line poetic form with an AABBA rhyme scheme.
Line: A single row of words in a poem. For example, a limerick has five lines, while
a haiku has three lines. Lines are one of the main things that
distinguish poetry from prose.
List Poem: A poem that contains a list of things, people, places, etc.
Rhythm: The sound and feel created by the pattern of accented and unaccented syllables,
usually repeated, in a poem.
Sight Rhyme: Words that end with the same letters, but not the same sound, such
as rough / cough /plough or prove / love / grove.
Simile: A comparison between to unlike things, usually using like, as, or than. For
example, his imagination was like a bird in flight.
Stanza: A group of lines in a poem, separated by space from other stanzas, much like a
paragraph in prose.
Theme: The main idea, topic, or subject of a poem.
Verse: Verse has several meanings, including, a line of a, a poem, poetry in general,
especially metrical poetry
Prose Vocabulary
Dialogue: A literary composition in the form of a conversation between two people Ex.
"he has read Plato's Dialogues in the original Greek".
First Person Point of View: The narrator is a character in the story and used words like
I, me, we.
Second Person Point of View: The narrator tells the story using the pronouns "You",
"Your," and "Yours" to address a reader or listener directly.
Third Person Point of View: Someone on the outside is looking in and telling the story
as he/she sees it unfold.
Third Person Limited Omniscient: This type of point of view presents the feelings and
thoughts of only one character, presenting only the actions of all remaining characters
Third Person Omniscient: Point of view in which an omniscient narrator, with a godlike
knowledge, is privy to the thoughts and actions of any or all characters.
Plot: The story that is told in a novel or play or movie etc. Ex. "The characters were well
drawn but the plot was banal."
Subplot: A secondary situation and conflict less important than the main plot of the story.
Setting: The time and place of a story.
Conflict: Opposition in a work of drama or fiction between characters or forces
(especially an opposition that motivates the development of the plot).
Science Fiction: Writing that tells about imaginary events that involve science or
technology.
Surprise Ending: A conclusion that violates the expectations of the reader but in a way
that is both logical and believable.
Suspense: Uncertainty or anxiety the reader feels about what is going to happen next in a
story.
Foreshadowing: The use of hints and clues to suggest what will happen later in a plot.
Tone: The quality of something (an act or a piece of writing) that reveals the attitudes and
presuppositions of the author. Ex. "the general tone of articles appearing in the
newspapers is that the government should withdraw"; "from the tone of her behavior I
gather.
Irony: A contrast between expectation and reality.
Climax: The highest point; the greatest moment or event; the turning point.
Theme: The main idea or meaning of a text. Often, this is an insight about human life
revealed in a literary work, or the central idea of a work of literature.
Style: A way of expressing something (in language or art or music etc.) that is
characteristic of a particular person or group of people or period; Ex. "all the reporters
were expected to adopt the style of the newspaper."
Man vs. Man: When the conflict is between TWO CHARACTERS; external.
Man vs. Himself: A character has trouble making a decision about a problem or a
struggle, or an internal conflict.
Man vs. Nature: Where a character or characters have to fight against the forces of
nature.
Man vs. Society: A character has a conflict or problem with some element of society the school, the law, etc.
Man vs. Supernatural: Where a character or characters fight against elements outside
the natural realm.
Nonfiction: Writing that tells about real people, places, and events.
Biography: Story of a person's life written by another person.
Autobiography: The story of a person's life written by that person.
Fiction: A literary work based on the imagination and not necessarily on fact.
Stereotype: Treat or classify according to a mental stereotype; Ex. "I was stereotyped as
a lazy Southern European."
Narrator: The person who tells the story.
Conflict: obstacles that get in the way of a character achieving what he or she wants.
What the characters struggle against.
Scene: a single situation or unit of dialogue in a play.
Stage Directions: messages from the playwright to the actors, technicians, and others in
the theater telling them what to do and how to do it.
Setting: time and place of a scene.
Biography: a characters life story that a playwright creates.
Monologue: a long speech one character gives on stage.
Dramatic Action: an explanation of what the characters are trying to do.
Beat: a smaller section of a scene, divided where a shift in emotion or topic occurs.
Plot: the structure of a play (including exposition, rising action, climax, falling action,
and denouement).
Exposition: the beginning part of a plot that provides important background information.
Rising Action: the middle part of a plot, consisting of complications and discoveries that
create conflict.
Climax: the turning point in a plot.
Falling Action: the series of events following the climax of a plot.
Denouement: the final resolution of the conflict in a plot.