<p>Poetry Reference Sheet</p><p>Alliteration: repetition of a sound or “Basketballs are bouncing in letter at the beginning of words in a line Big Blue Nation on this beautiful day…” of poetry</p><p>Onomatopoeia: use of words whose Bees buzz A faucet drips sounds suggest their meaning</p><p>Personification: giving human qualities to The fall leaves danced in the wind. an animal, object, or idea</p><p>Simile: a comparison using the words “like” He is quick as lightning! or “as”</p><p>Metaphor: a comparison without using the Her hair is a rainbow of colors. words “like” or “as”</p><p>I have a ton of homework tonight! Hyperbole: use of exaggeration or overstatement for emphasis</p><p>Jumbo Shrimp Oxymoron: a figure of speech that links Cold Sweat two opposite or contradictory words Idiom: an expression that has a meaning apart from the meanings of its individual Wrap up or you’ll catch a cold! words (not literal)</p><p>Love Freedom Symbol: a person, place, an object or action that stands for something beyond itself 5 Snowflakes gently fall 7 The earth is covered with white Haiku: a traditional form of Japenese 5 Winter wonderland poetry consisting of three lines; the first on has 5 syllables, the second has 7, and the third one has 5 syllables</p><p>1 Cats 2 Independent, affectionate Cinquain: another type of Japenese poem, 3 Chasing toy mice 4 Glad when you’re home containing 5 lines and set number of 1 Pets words in each line (1,2,3,4,1)</p><p>A There was an old man with a beard A Who said, “It is just as I feared!” Limerick: a humorous 5-line poem; lines B Two owls and a hen, B Four larks and a wren, 1,2, and 5 rhyme, while lines 3 and 4 share A Have all built their nests in my beard! a different rhyme</p><p>Hold your horses! </p>
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