3-2-12 review: analyzing a poem. today’s agenda mini lesson: sound devices in poetry work time:...
TRANSCRIPT
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3-2-12
•Review:•Analyzing a Poem
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Today’s Agenda
• MINI LESSON: Sound devices in poetry• WORK TIME: Scavenger Hunt for
sound devices in the SAME poems!• HOMEWORK: finish the Scavenger
Hunt
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Personification• When a writer makes a thing, idea, or an
animal do something only humans can do• When a non-human subject is given
human characteristics
• Example-The wind yells.
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Personification continued…
Create your own personification examples using the following nouns.
-iPod - Uggs -Kindle -Laptop
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Hyperbole• an extreme exaggeration• can be used to create mood and evoke
strong feelings
• Example: “I ate a billion cookies!”
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Hyperbole continued…Create a hyperbole about your PCR book’s protagonist, or about something the protagonist did.
• Example-”Cap Anderson’s hair stands ten feet high!”
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Alliteration
• the repetition of a consonant sound or sounds at the beginning of words that are close together.
• Two repeated sounds is ok; three is better!
• Example:Hear the loud alarum bells--Brazen bells!What a tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells!
--Edgar Allen Poe, "The Bells"
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Alliteration
• Create an alliteration using your PCR book’s title.
• It should convey the book’s mood.
• Crazy kids in Connections not being kind
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Onomatopoeia• the use of words to imitate sounds • words whose sounds suggest their
meaning
Zoom Buzz Zing Fizz
Ding dong POW Ping Bang
Beep Rattle SNAP! Hiss
RING BOOM! Pop Crackle
Sizzle Whack Hum
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Onomatopoeia
• Give an example of onomatopoeia for each category.
-car sound-an animal
• Invent an onomatopoeia word to imitate a sound.
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Rhyme• Repetition of sounds at the end of words• Gives a song-like quality to a poem
end rhyme -words rhyming at the end of linesThe way a crowShook down on meThe dust of snowFrom a Hemlock tree from “Dust of Snow” by Robert Frost
internal rhyme -rhyming words within linesOnce upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary
from “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe
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Couplet
• A structure of some poems• A pair of lines that have an end rhyme
Example:He came upon an ageBeset by grief, by rage
from “Martin Luther King” by Raymond Richard Patterson
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Rhythm• Pattern of repeated stressed and unstressed
syllables.• In poetry and music, it creates a beat or pulse.Example: Pause at the /
“I pledge allegiance/ to the Flag/ of the United States of America/ and to the Republic/ for which it stands/one nation/under God/ indivisible/with liberty /and justice for all.“
Non-Example: Pause at the /“I pledge/ allegiance to the Flag of/ the United States of America/ and /to the Republic for which it stands, one nation/ under God indivisible with liberty /and justice for all."
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Rhythm
• Pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in language
Sound Devices in MUSICListen and T2T for these songs: find figurative
language and sound devices!“Unwritten” lyrics “Unwritten” song“Life is a Highway” lyrics “Life is a Highway” song
Feel free to bring in or email a favorite song that is full of sound devices and figurative language!
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Scavenger Hunt Part 2
Use the same poems from yesterday’s
scavenger hunt to find sound
devices.