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Lesson 6—EOG Vocabulary

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1 Lesson 6—EOG Vocabulary
By: Mrs. Burton Reminder: Friday, March 28, 2008

2 Alliteration: the initial repetition of consonant sounds

3 Assonance: the repetition of vowel sounds within words or syllables

4 Consonance: the repetition of two or more consonants with different vowel sounds in between.
Example: Bill could play ball for the Bulls, but he badly wants to bowl!

5 End rhyme: the way to define the rhyme scheme
Roses are red-----A Violets are blue---B Sugar is sweet----C And so are you!---B

6 Figurative language: language not meant to be taken literally.
“I’m so hungry I could eat a horse”

7 Hyperbole: exaggeration
“Slicker than snot on a door knob!” snot

8 Image: vivid pictures that stick in the reader’s mind

9 line: what stanzas are made of, numbered
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall; Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the King's horses And all the King's men 5 Couldn't  put Humpty together again! LINE

10 Metaphor: compares two things by saying (or suggesting) that one thing is another.

11 Onomatopoeia: the use of words that sound like what they signify.

12 Personification: giving inanimate objects human characteristics.

13 Rhyme: the way in which the author creates the “music” of a poem.

14 Rhythm: like the “beat” in a song

15 Speaker: the character who is “saying” the words of the poem.

16 Stanza: what poems are made of (paragraph)
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall; Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the King's horses And all the King's men 5 Couldn't  put Humpty together again! STANZA

17 Structure: how the poem is “built”


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