| Sonnet | | Poetry that does not have a set rhyme scheme. |
| Antonym | | Giving human qualities to non-humans (animals, objects, ideas). |
| Theme | | The distincitve way that a writer uses language. |
| Irony | | The message or point of a work. |
| Rhymescheme | | A poem that tells a story. |
| Refrain | | Poetry in play form, like Shakespeare. |
| Homer | | A writer's choice of words. |
| Mood | | Two words with opposite, or nearly opposite, meanings. |
| Rhythm | | The voice talking to us in a poem or story. |
| Setting | | A technique that involves contradictions or contrasts. It can be verbal or dramatic. |
| Dialogue | | A speech by one character, usually in a play. |
| Extendedmetaphor | | The conversations that characters have with one another. |
| Alliteration | | A poem that expresses a speaker's thoughts or feelings. |
| Poetlaurete | | A comparison that does not use like or as. |
| Symbol | | The repetition of the same sounds at the beginning of words. |
| Metaphor | | The use of sound words such as bang, buzz, pow. |
| Monologue | | The repetition of the sounds to link words, such as bat |
| Dramatic | | The rhyme pattern that a poem follows. |
| Style | | A comparion using like, as or than. |
| Haiku | | A musical quality based on repetition. |
| Stanza | | A Japanese 3 line, 17 syllable poem. |
| Synonym | | A reference to a well-known person, place, event, literary work, or artwork. |
| Freeverse | | THe place and time in which a story or poem takes place. |
| Couplet | | A metaphor that continues throughout a poem or song, such as "Strange Fruit." |
| Onomatopoeia | | Two words with the same or similar meaning. |
| Ballad | | The offical poet of the United States |
| Poe | | Person, place, or thing that represents something beyond itself, like a flag. |
| Tone | | The author's attitude towards the subject or audience. |
| Diction | | A phrase or a stanza that is repeated throughout a work. |
| Lyric | | Two rhyming lines of poetry. |
| Figurativelanguage | | Language used in poetry based on imaginative comparisons that is not literally true. |
| Imagery | | Language that appeals to the senses. |
| Narrative | | A paragraph of poetry. |
| Rhyme | | The author of "The Raven." |
| Speaker | | The feeling a piece of literature is intended to create. |
| Simile | | A song that tells a story. |
| Allusion | | A 14 line poetic form often used by Shakespeare. |
| Personification | | The Ancient Greek poet who wrote "The Odyssey." |