You are on page 1of 2

A poem uses:

a) Remarks and quotes,


b) Lines and stanzas
c) Notes and scales
d) Odds and ends

The poet is the:

a) Narrator
b) Speaker
c) Author
d) Audience

The person who narrates the poem is:

a) The poet
b) The speaker
c) The listener
d) The audience

When words sound alike because they share the same ending vowel and consonant they are called:

a) Allusions
b) Metaphors
c) Similes
d) Rhymes

“If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers” can be called a/an:

a) Alliteration
b) Metaphor
c) Simile
d) Rhyme

A rhyme scheme is a pattern of rhyme represented by:

a) Roman numbers
b) Letters of the alphabet
c) Punctuation marks
d) Accent marks

The verse, “Once upon a midnight dreary / while I wondered weak and weary” uses:

a) Alliteration
b) Metaphor
c) Simile
d) Internal rhyme

A narrative poem usually,


a) Tells a story
b) Asks question
c) States a fact
d) Summarizes a thought

A Shakespearean sonnet has:

a) 12 lines
b) 9 lines
c) 14 lines
d) 10 lines

You might also like