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English, 20.03.2020 10:58 lafuiciosa10

[Matching 4/5]

Match the literary terms to the examples.

For:

Alliteration

a
“His heart pounded – a drum in his chest.”

b
“The sweet perfume danced across the room with every spray."

c
“Nature’s first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold.”

d
“My mom will kill me, if I use all the cell phone minutes again!”

e
“Warm winds whipped through the willows”

Question 23 (1 point)
[Matching 5/5]

Match the literary terms to the examples.

For:

Rhyme

a
“Nature’s first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold.”

b
“My mom will kill me, if I use all the cell phone minutes again!”

c
“His heart pounded – a drum in his chest.”

d
“The sweet perfume danced across the room with every spray."

e
“Warm winds whipped through the willows”

Question 24 (1 point)
When you, my Dear, are away, away, / How wearily goes the day.
A year drags after morning, and night / Starts another year

a
metaphor

b
hyperbole

c
onomatopoeia

d
simile

e
irony

Question 25 (1 point)
Chicago is a city that is fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action.

a
repetition

b
onomatopoeia

c
simile

d
enjambment

e
metaphor

Question 26 (1 point)
Gracefully she sat down sideways, / With a simple smile

a
rhyme

b
metaphor

c
simile

d
alliteration

e
personification

Question 27 (1 point)
Drip—hiss—drip—hiss— fall the raindrops.

a
personification

b
metaphor

c
hyperbole

d
onomatopoeia

e
simile

Question 28 (1 point)
The fountain tossed its water, / Up and up, like silver marbles.

a
idiom

b
personification
c
simile

d
hyperbole

e
rhyme

f
metaphor

Question 29 (1 point)
Falstaff sweats to death, as he walks along; / Were't not for laughing, I should pity him.

a
rhyme

b
simile

c
metaphor

d
hyperbole

e
personification

Question 30 (1 point)
Lives of great men remind us / We can make our lives sublime;
And, departing, leave behind us / Footprints on the sands of time.

a
simile

b
hyperbole

c
metaphor

d
onomatopoeia

e
personification

Question 31 (1 point)
His sorrow goes / Like mountain snows / In waters sweet and clear,

a
repetition

b
metaphor

c
simile

d
onomatopoeia

e
hyperbole

Question 32 (1 point)
The tear-drop trickled to his chin: / There was a meaning in her grin

a
repetition

b
metaphor

c
hyperbole

d
simile

e
rhyme

Question 33 (1 point)
All night long with rush and lull / The rain kept drumming on the roof:

a
personification

b
hyperbole

c
rhyme

d
simile

e
repetition

Question 34 (1 point)
The child with / her infinite energy / would run / her parents to / the ground

a
personification

b
hyperbole

c
simile

d
repetition

e
metaphor

Question 35 (1 point)
My love is like a red, red rose.

a
rhyme

b
simile

c
irony

d
personification

e
metaphor

Question 36 (1 point)
When the stooping sky / Leans down upon the hills

a
repetition

b
metaphor

c
simile

d
hyperbole

e
personification

Question 37 (1 point)
I could see a patch of old snow in a corner.

a
repetition

b
metaphor

c
simile

d
irony

e
imagery

Question 38 (1 point)
Texas is a state that is as mean as a dog with teeth ready for biting.

a
enjambment

b
onomatopoeia

c
repetition

d
simile

e
metaphor

Question 39 (1 point)
The repeating of beginning consonant sounds is .

a
onomatopoeia

b
rhyme

c
refrain

d
alliteration

Question 40 (1 point)
Poetry that does not follow a specific form and does not have to rhyme is known as poetry.

a
cinquain

b
free verse

c
haiku

d
limerick

Question 41 (1 point)
is a type of Japanese poetry that is made up of three lines.

a
diamonte

b
haiku

c
riddle

d
limerick

Question 42 (1 point)
A is a line (or lines) that is (are) repeated at the end of stanzas in poetry and music.

a
simile

b
rhyme

c
refrain

d
rhythm

Question 43 (1 point)
Which kind of poetry tells a story with a plot, character(s), and setting?

a
lyrical poetry

b
diamonte poetry

c
concrete poetry

d
narrative poetry

Question 44 (1 point)
This kind of poetry forms the shape of its subject.

a
haiku

b
limerick

c
diamonte

d
concrete

Question 45 (1 point)
This kind of poetry forms the shape of a diamond.

a
concrete

b
diamonte

c
limerick

d
haiku

Question 46 (1 point)
are humorous poems of five lines. They have definite rhythm and a rhyme scheme of aabba.

a
diamonte

b
cinquain

c
limerick

d
lyric

Question 47 (1 point)
A group of lines in a poem similar to that of a paragraph; the way the poem is divided.

a
stanza

b
simile

c
repetition

d
alliteration

Question 48 (1 point)
The repeating of end sounds of words is .

a
feet

b
rhythm

c
meter

d
rhyme

Question 49 (1 point)
When rhyming is organized into patterns and can be labeled aaba it is called

a
repetition

b
alliteration

c
rhyme

d
rhyme scheme

Question 50 (1 point)
The repeating of a word or phrase to add rhythm or emphasis is

a
rhyme scheme

b
alliteration

c
rhyme

d
repetition

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[Matching 4/5]

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