Review Game. Prose vs. Poetry Poetry Format Literary Devices Literary Devices 2 Poetry Project 10 20...

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Review Game

Prose vs. Poetry

Poetry Format Literary Devices

Literary Devices 2

Poetry Project

10 10 10 10 10

20 20 20 20 20

30 30 30 30 30

40 40 40 40 40

50 50 50 50 50

Final Question

True or False: Poetry has to rhyme

False– There are many types of poems that do not rhyme (free verse)

10 points

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True or False: Poetry always has proper grammar, spelling,

and punctuation

False—That is the fun with poems! You do not have to follow all the rules of prose!

20 points

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Give 3 examples of where you might see prose writing

Newspapers, Magazines, Books

30 points

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List two similarities between prose and poetry

Both have authors and titles

40 points

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List 4 characterizes of prose and 4 characteristics of poetry

(T CHART)

Answers will vary

50 points

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True or False: Poems are made up of sentences

False—Poems are made up of lines

10 points

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TWO or more lines in a poem is called:

A stanza

20 points

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Give two reasons why some authors may chose to be

anonymous

Answers will vary

30 points

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As Soon as Fred Gets Out of Bed -Jack Prelutsky

 As soon as Fred gets out of bed,his underwear goes on his head.

His mother laughs, "Don't put it there,a head's no place for underwear!"

But near his ears, above his brains,is where Fred's underwear remains.

 At night when Fred goes back to bed,

he deftly plucks it off his head.His mother switches off the light

and softly croons, "Good night! Good night!"And then, for reasons no one knows,Fred's underwear goes on his toes.

Title: As Soon as Fred Gets Out of Bed

Author: Jack Prelutsky

12 lines—2 stanzas

40 points

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Read the poem and answer the following questions:

-Title-Author-How many lines-How many stanzas

As Soon as Fred Gets Out of Bed -Jack Prelutsky

 As soon as Fred gets out of bed,his underwear goes on his head.

His mother laughs, "Don't put it there,a head's no place for underwear!"

But near his ears, above his brains,is where Fred's underwear remains.

 At night when Fred goes back to bed,

he deftly plucks it off his head.His mother switches off the light

and softly croons, "Good night! Good night!"And then, for reasons no one knows,Fred's underwear goes on his toes.

A B C A D E

A B C A D E

50 points

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Read the poem and label the rhyme scheme using a, b, c, d, e

BOOM, POW, BANG, SPLASH are all examples of?

Onomatopoeia

10 points

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Create a simple alliteration poem (1 line)

Answers will vary

20 points

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What is the difference between similes and metaphors?

The both compare– but similes use like or as and metaphors say something is something

else

30 points

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Give an example of a simile—then change it into a metaphor.

Answers will vary

40 points

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Add 1-2 sensory details to this boring line and turn it into imagery:

I walked down the street

Answers will vary

50 points

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The following sentence is an example of what literary device:

The sun greeted me this morning.

Personification

10 points

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Explain the difference between repetition and alliteration

Repetition is the repeating of lines or phrases in a song or poem; alliteration is the repeating of

consonants at the beginning of words

20 points

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Give an example of a hyperbole

Answers will vary

30 points

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What is the purpose of repeating lines in a poem or

song?

It shows that something is important

40 points

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What are two reasons authors use figurative language in their

writing?

1. To make their writing more interesting/ creative

2. To catch the reader’s attention

50 points

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How many TOTAL poems do you need in your poetry book?

10 (5 of your own, 5 famous poems)

10 points

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True or False: You need a paragraph for each poem explaining why it is going in your

book?

TRUE!

20 points

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Each poem you write needs 2 stanzas- 8 lines total. How many of those lines

should have figurative language?

At least 2 lines should have figurative language

30 points

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Explain the requirements you need for each famous poem

(at least 4)

-Title

-Author’s name

-Typed poem

-1 paragraph explaining why it is going in your book

-1 paragraph analyzing poem

40 points

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Explain the requirements you need for each of your created poems

(at least 4)

-Creative title

-Typed poem

-At least two lines of figurative language

-Highlighted figurative language

-Picture

-1 paragraph explaining why the poem is going in your book

50 points

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Think As I ThinkBy Stephen Crane

"Think as I think," said a man,”Or you are abominably wicked;

You are a toad.

"And after I had thought of it,I said, "I will, then, be a toad."

Answers will vary

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Write a paragraph analyzing the following poem. In order to get the points all members of your group must complete this assignment—due tomorrow!

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