Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Critial Vocab, English Lit a Level
Critical Vocabulary Builder A Abjure ââ¬â To renounce or retract esp formally or under oath, or solemnly. Abduration ââ¬â The act of renouncing. Ablation ââ¬â The surgical removal of an organ, structure, or part. Ablate. Ablution ââ¬âà The ritual washing of a priestââ¬â¢s hands. Abnegate (abnegation) ââ¬â To deny to oneself; renounce privileges, pleasure, etc. Abstergent ââ¬â Of cleaning or scouring Abstruse ââ¬â Not easy to understand; recondite; esoteric. Acalculia ââ¬â psycol. An inability to make simple mathematical calculations. Acumen ââ¬â Quickness of perception or discernment; shrewdness shown by keen insight.Adherents ââ¬â Follower, or supporter of. Adjacent ââ¬â Being near or close, esp. having a common boundary. ; adjoining; contiguous. Adjuvant ââ¬â Aiding or assisting. Aesopian ââ¬â Conveying meaning by hint, euphemism, innuendo or the like. 2) Pertaining to, or characteristic of Aesop or his fables. Aesthetic â⠬â Broadly speaking, something pleasing, or the study of beauty. Aesthetic distance ââ¬âà degree of emotional involvement in a work of art. The most obvious example of aesthetic distance (also referred to simply as distance) occurs with paintings.Some paintings require us to stand back to see the design of the whole painting; standing close, we see the technique of the painting, say the brush strokes, but not the whole. Other paintings require us to stand close to see the whole; their design and any figures become less clear as we move back from the painting. Similarly, fiction, drama, and poetry involve the reader emotionally to different degrees. Emotional distance, or the lack of it, can be seen with children watching a TV program or a movie; it becomes real for them.Writers like Faulkner, the Bronte sisters, or Faulkner pull the reader into their work; the reader identifies closely with the characters and is fully involved with the happenings. Hemingway, on the other ha nd, maintains a greater distance from the reader. Affective Fallacy ââ¬â The error of evaluating a poem by its effectsââ¬âespecially its emotional effectsââ¬âupon the reader. As a result the poem itself, as an object of specifically critical judgement, tends to disappear. Alacrity ââ¬â Liveliness or briskness. Alalia ââ¬â Complete inability to speak; mutism.Allegory ââ¬â A narrative where characters, actions and sometimes setting are consistently symbolic of something else (often philosophical or moral abstractions). Alliteration ââ¬â the use, especially in poetry, of the same sound or sounds, especially consonants, at the beginning of several words that are close together Ambiguity ââ¬â Ambiguity is the quality of having more than one meaning; doesà Ameliorate ââ¬â To make or become better; improve. Amelioration. Amorphous ââ¬â Lacking a definite shape; formless. 2 ââ¬â Of no recognisable character or shape.Anachronisms ââ¬â Flash backs, jumps forwards. Analogy ââ¬â a comparison between things which have similar features, often used to help explain a principle or idea Analepis ââ¬â A flash-back Anathema ââ¬â A detested person or thing ââ¬Ëhe is anathema to me! ââ¬â¢ 2 A formal ecclesiastical curse of excommunication. Antonym ââ¬â An antonym is a word opposite in meaning to another word but similar to it in most other respects. For example, tall and short are opposite in meaning but both are the same parts of speech (adjectives) and would take the same position in a sentence.Aporia ââ¬â An impassable moment or point in a narrative, a hole or opening that produces a hermeneutic analysis. Arbitrarily ââ¬â Founded on or subject to personal whims, prejudices, etc. ; capricious. 2 ââ¬â Having only relative application. 3 ââ¬â Of a government or ruler despotic or dictatorial. Arcane ââ¬â Requiring secret knowledge to be understood; mysterious; esoteric. Arrhythmic / Arrhythm ia ââ¬â Any variation from the normal rhythm of the heart beat. Arriere-pensee ââ¬â An unrevealed thought or intention. Arriviste ââ¬â A person who is unscrupulously ambitious. Assiduous ââ¬â Hard-working; persevering.Assignation ââ¬â A secret or forbidden arrangement to meet esp. between lovers. Attest ââ¬â To affirm the correctness or truth of. Auric ââ¬â Of or containing gold in the trivalent state. Autodidact ââ¬â One who is self-taught. Avarice ââ¬â The getting and keeping of money, possessions etc as a purpose to live for. B Ballad ââ¬âà relatively short narrative poem, written to be sung, with a simple and dramatic action. The ballads tell of love, death, the supernatural, or a combination of these. Two characteristics of the ballad are incremental repetition and the ballad stanza.Incremental repetition repeats one or more lines with small but significant variations that advance the action. The ballad stanza is four lines; commonly, t he first and third lines contain four feet or accents, the second and fourth lines contain three feet. Ballads often open abruptly, present brief descriptions, and use concise dialogue. Baroque ââ¬â A term applied by art-historians (at first derogatorily, but now merely descriptively) to a style of architecture, sculpture, and painting that developed in Italy at the beginning of the seventeenth century and then spread to Germany and other European countries.The style employs the classical forms of the renaissance, but breaks them up and intermingles them to achieve elaborate, grandiose, energetic, and highly dramatic effects. In Literature, it may signify magniloquent style in verse or prose. Beatitude ââ¬â Supreme blessedness or happiness. Benefactor ââ¬â A person who supports or helps a person (Beneficiary), institution etc. , esp. by giving money; patron. Bilious ââ¬â Bad tempered. 2. Hideously green. Blank verse ââ¬â Blank verse is a form based on unrhymed li nes of iambic pentameter.The verse parts of Shakespeare's plays are blank verse (with exceptions, such as the witches' recipe), as is Milton's Paradise Lost. The form is one that is close to normal speech (indeed, ââ¬Å"the form is one that's close to normal speechâ⬠is itself an iambic pentameter) so it gives a subtle pulse to a poem, rather than an obvious shaping as a limerick might. However, there is a tendency in contemporary poetry to use shorter lines, so the form can also sound stately or slow to a modern ear.? Bowyer ââ¬â Person or makes or sells archery bows. Bumptious ââ¬â Offensively self-assertive or conceited.C Cadence ââ¬â (Poetry) A fall, in tone, in pitch etc. Catalectic ââ¬â (Poetry) ââ¬â of a line, missing one or more beats. Catechism ââ¬â Instruction by a series of questions and answers esp a book containing such instruction on the religious doctrine of the Christian church. 2 Rigorous and persistent questioning, as in a test or inte rview. Character ââ¬â Characters may be classified as round (three-dimensional, fully developed) or as flat (having only a few traits or only enough traits to fulfil their function in the work); as developing (dynamic) characters or as static characters.Caesura ââ¬â a strong pause within a line, and is often found alongside enjambment. If all the pauses in the sense of the poem were to occur at the line breaks, this could become dull; moving the pauses so they occur within the line creates a musical interest. Chivalric Romance ââ¬â Developed in 12th Century France, spread and displaced epic and heroic forms. Climax ââ¬â The height of tensions or suspense in a story's plot where conflict comes to a peak. Coetaneous ââ¬â Of the same age or period. Coeval ââ¬â Of belonging to the same age or generation. 2) A contemporary.Collocate ââ¬â To group or place together in some system or order. Collusion ââ¬â Secret agreement for a fraudulent purpose; connivance ; conspiracy. Conceit ââ¬â The Metaphysical poets of the seventeenth century enjoyed creating particularly audacious metaphors and similes to compare very unlike things, and drawing attention to how skilfully they could sustain this comparison; this became known as the conceit. The classic example is probably Donne's ââ¬ËThe Flea', in which a flea-bite is compared to a marriage, and like most conceits, the extended comparison is more notable for its invention than its believability.Concomitant ââ¬â Existing or occurring together; associative. Concord ââ¬â Agreement or harmony between people or nations; amity. Confabulate ââ¬â To talk together, to communicate. Confiteor ââ¬â A prayer consisting of a general confession of sinfulness and an entreaty for forgiveness. Conflagration ââ¬â A large destructive fire. Conflagration ââ¬â A large destructive fire. Conflate / Conflation ââ¬â To combine or blend, esp two versions of a text, so as to form a whole. Conflict ââ¬â The part of the plot that establishes an opposition that becomes a point of interest.Can ve an opposition between characters, between character and environment, between elements in a character's personality etc. Conglomerate ââ¬â A thing composed heterogeneous elements. Conjecture ââ¬â The formation of conclusions from incomplete evidence; a guess. Consonance ââ¬â Consonance is the effect of similar speech-sounds being near each other. Some forms of consonance can be singled out, which are: alliteration, where initial sounds matter; sibilance, where ââ¬Ës' and ââ¬Ëz' sounds are enhanced; and assonance, where the vowel-sounds of words are in concert.Contiguous ââ¬â Touching along the side or boundary; in contact. Convivial ââ¬â Sociable, jovial or festive. Corpulent ââ¬â Physically bulky; fat. Coterie ââ¬â A small exclusive group of friends with common interests; clique. Coterminous ââ¬â Enclosed within a common boundary. Coter minous ââ¬â Having a common boundary. Couplet ââ¬â A couplet is a stanza (or even a poem) consisting of two lines. These need not rhyme, nor be the same length, but can be. If there is no enjambment at the end of the second line, it can be called a closed couplet (the opposite being an open couplet), especially if this is a recurring pattern.A closed rhyming couplet in iambic pentameter, especially one which forms a unit of sense, is called a heroic couplet; many of these can be found in Pope's ââ¬ËEssay on Man'. It is also possible to find a longer poem whose lines are rhymed in pairs ââ¬â aabbcc etc ââ¬â described as being in rhyming couplets, even if the stanzas are longer than two lines. D Daltonism ââ¬â Colour blindness: the inability to distinguish green from red. Damocles ââ¬â Imminent danger in midst of prosperity/ Greek who feasted with sword hung by a hair above his head. De Facto ââ¬â In fact. 2 ââ¬â Existing in fact.De haut en bas â⬠â In condescending or superior manner. Deââ¬â¢ I graââ¬â¢tia ââ¬â By Godââ¬â¢s grace. Deambulation ââ¬â Walking. Debacle ââ¬â Break-up of ice on a river/ confused rush or stampede/ collapse, downfall esp of a government. Debouch ââ¬â (esp. of troops) ââ¬â To move into a more open space, as from a narrow or concealed place. Declarativist ââ¬â Want to show a mystery resolved ââ¬â transparent ââ¬â form has no effect over the shaping of events. Declivous ââ¬â Sloping down. Decrescent ââ¬â Waning, decreasing usually of the moon. Deference ââ¬â Submission to or compliance with the will, wishes, etc. of another. Deleterious ââ¬â Noxious physically or morally injurious. Demarcate ââ¬â To mark, fix, or draw the boundaries, limits etc. (Demarcation) ââ¬â the act of establishing limits, boundaries etc. Denouement ââ¬â French for untying, it is the final element of the conflict in a plot similar to a resolution, usually very emotional. Devilment ââ¬â Mischief, wild spirits: Devilish or strange phenomenon. Dextrous ââ¬â Variant spelling of dexterous ââ¬â Possessing or done with dexterity. Diatribe ââ¬â A bitter or violent criticism or attack; denunciation.Dichotomy ââ¬â a difference between two completely opposite ideas or things Dramatic monologue ââ¬â A dramatic monologue is a poem that shares many features with a speech from a play: one person speaks, and in that speech there are clues to his/her character, the character of the implied person or people that s/he is speaking to, the situation in which it is spoken and the story that has led to this situation. Ian Duhig's ââ¬ËFundamentals', for example, gives plenty of information about the character of the hapless missionary, about the tone of the meeting, and the colonial violence that underpins what is on face value a message of religion.The effect is one of a small poem seeming to leave you with the experience of having s een the whole film that was packed tightly into it. Dystaxia ââ¬â Lack of muscular co-ordination resulting in shaky limb movements and unsteady gait. E Eclectic ââ¬â Selecting or made up of what seems best of varied sources. Effervesce ââ¬â To give off bubbles of gas. Egalitarian ââ¬â of relating to, or upholding the doctrine of the equality of mankind and the desirability of political, social, and economic equality. Egregious ââ¬â Outstandingly bad; flagrant. Egress ââ¬â (also called egression) ââ¬â the act of going or coming out; emergence.Electorate ââ¬â The body of all qualified voters Elegy ââ¬â An elegy is a poem of mourning; this is often the poet mourning one person, but the definition also includes Thomas Gray's ââ¬ËElegy Written in a Country Churchyard', which mourns all the occupants of that churchyard, and looks into the future to mourn the poet's own death. The difference between an elegy and a eulogy is that the latter is a speech given to honour someone's best qualities, often (but not necessarily) after their death. Endemic ââ¬â Present within or localised area or peculiar to persons in such an area.Enjambement ââ¬â Enjambment is the continuation of a sentence or clause over a line-break. If a poet allows all the sentences of a poem to end in the same place as regular line-breaks, a kind of deadening can happen in the ear, and in the brain too, as all the thoughts can end up being the same length. Enjambment is one way of creating audible interest; others include caesurae, or having variable line-lengths. Enlightenment ââ¬â The name applied to an intellectual movement and cultural ambiance which developed in Western Europe during the 17th Century, reaching its height in the 18th century.The common element was a trust in human reason as adequate to solve the crucial problems and to establish the essential norms in life, together with a belief that the application of reason was rapidly dissipatin g the darkness of superstition, prejudice, and barbarity, was freeing humanity from its earlier reliance on mere authority and unexamined tradition, and had opened the prospect of progress toward a life in this world of universal peace and happiness. See Descartes, Locke, Voltaire, Godwin, Diderot, Franklin, Jefferson.Ephemeral ââ¬â Lasting only for a short time; transitory; short-lived. Epigone ââ¬â An inferior follower or imitator Epigram ââ¬â An epigram is a short, succinct poem, often with witty (or even vicious) content. Coleridge wrote an epigram to define an epigram: ââ¬Å"What is an epigram? A dwarfish whole, / Its body brevity and wit its soul. â⬠It is worth noting that this is a stricter definition than epigrams seem to have had in classical Greece and Rome, where the form originates; it is probably the eighteenth-century fondness for a smart wit and the epigrams of Martial that tightened the definition thus.The preference in contemporary poetry for expl oring an issue rather than summing it up means epigrams are not as popular as they were then, but Anne Stevenson's ââ¬ËOn Going Deaf', with its wit, rhyme and definite opinion, is probably the closest example within the Archive. Epigraph ââ¬â An epigraph is a brief bit of text, usually borrowed from another writer, found before a poem, but after the title. (You may also find one at the start of a book, before the poems, but after the title page. ) It gives a reader, or listener, something else to hold in mind as the poem is read.Neither part of the poem, nor wholly separate from it, an epigraph can be used for various purposes; it can be necessary information to understand a poem, for example, or it can be something with which the poem disagrees. Epistemophilia ââ¬â The readerââ¬â¢s desire to know. Ergo ââ¬â Therefore; hence. Esoteric ââ¬â Restricted to or intended for an enlightened or initiated minority, esp. because of abstruseness or obscurity: an esoteric cult. 2 ââ¬â Difficult to understand; abstruse: an esoteric statement. 3 ââ¬â Not openly admitted; private: esoteric aims. Espouse ââ¬â To adopt or give support to.Espy ââ¬â To catch sight of or perceive. Eugenics ââ¬â The study of improving the quality of the human race esp. by selective breeding. Evanescent ââ¬â Passing out of sight; fading away; vanishing. Evangelism ââ¬â The practice of spreading the Christian gospel. 2 ââ¬â Ardent or missionary zeal for a cause Exegesis ââ¬â Explanation or critical interpretation of a text, esp. of the Bible Exhaustivistic ââ¬â A book must be complete; to be reliable is to be complete therefore Realistic novels have more detail and description per square inch than any other literary form.Expectorant ââ¬â Promoting the secretion, liquefaction, or expulsion of sputum from the respiratory passages. Expediency ââ¬â Appropriateness; suitability. 2) The use or inclination towards methods that are advant ageous rather than fair. Exposition ââ¬â Provides background on characters, setting, plot. Extant ââ¬â Still existing; not yet destroyed, lost or extinct. F Fabula ââ¬â Order of events recounted by the narrative, the real order of the chronological events. Facetious ââ¬â joking or jesting often inappropriately / meant to be humorous or funny : not serious.Falsetto ââ¬â A form of vocal production used by male singers to extend their range upwards beyond its natural compass by limiting the vibration of the vocal cords. Fatuous ââ¬âComplacently or inanely foolish. Feminine ââ¬â of an ending (poetry) of one or more unstressed beats. Fervour ââ¬â Great intensity of feeling or belief. Figurative Language ââ¬â Language used in a way to achieve some effect beyond literal meaning. See hyperbole, metaphor, personification, simile and synecdoche. Flambeau ââ¬â A burning torch, as used in night processions.Foil ââ¬â A foil is a secondary character who contrasts with a major character; in Hamlet, Laertes and Fortinbras, whose fathers have been killed, are foils for Hamlet. Foot ââ¬â A foot is a unit of metre, consisting of a combination of stressed and unstressed syllables. If stressed syllables are marked ââ¬Å"/â⬠and unstressed ââ¬Å"uâ⬠, the main types can be shown thus:? Iamb: [ u / ], such as ââ¬Å"delightâ⬠. (The adjective is ââ¬Å"iambicâ⬠. ) Trochee: [ / u ], such as ââ¬Å"badgerâ⬠(Trochaic)? Anapest, or anapaest: [ u u / ], such as ââ¬Å"unawareâ⬠(Anapestic / anapaestic)?Dactyl: [ / u u ], such as ââ¬Å"multipleâ⬠(Dactylic) and, more rarely: Spondee: [ / / ], such as ââ¬Å"tooth-acheâ⬠? Pyrrhic: [ u u ], such as ââ¬Å"such asâ⬠was until it was put in quotation marks. It is important to remember that feet and words need not coincide. The feet in John Heath-Stubbs' line, ââ¬Å"A caterpillar among those mulberry leavesâ⬠, from ââ¬ËThe Mulberry Tree' app ear thus: | a CAT | er PILL | ar a MONG | those MUL | berry LEAVES |? | u / | u / | u u / | u / | u / |That one word ââ¬Å"caterpillarâ⬠is scattered across three feet in this five-foot line ââ¬â the first two are iambs, then after a single anapaest there are two further iambs (or one iamb and one more anapaest, depending on whether you say mul-ber-ry or mul-bree). Also note that, although there is an anapaest in the centre of this line, this is still a predominantly iambic line (especially as it is within a predominantly iambic poem) ââ¬â varying the feet like this can keep a line from getting metrically dull. The process of working out where the stresses fall is called scanning, or scansion.It's easiest to do it on poems where the rhythms are pronounced; on the other hand, it can be near-impossible, or simply unhelpful, to scan free verse. The poems suggested below have strongly accented feet, and the links to metre and form go into more detail on how poets use feet. Foregrounding ââ¬â Giving unusual providence to one element or property of a text, relative to other less noticeable aspects. Form ââ¬â Form, in poetry, can be understood as the physical structure of the poem: the length of the lines, their rhythms, their system of rhymes and repetition.In this sense, it is normally reserved for the type of poem where these features have been shaped into a pattern, especially a familiar pattern. Another sense of ââ¬Å"formâ⬠is to refer to these familiar patterns ââ¬â these can be simple and open-ended forms, such as blank verse, or can be a complex system of rhymes, rhythms and repeated lines within a fixed number of lines, as a sonnet or villanelle is. (This is similar to the word ââ¬Å"shapeâ⬠; asked to think about ââ¬Å"a shapeâ⬠, you would expect a triangle or a circle, but Alaska too has a shape. ) The difference s visible in Sebastian Barker's poem ââ¬ËHoly The Heart On Which We Hang Our Hope': the form of t his poem shares aspects with another form, the villanelle, but also differs from it in interesting ways, just as its content shares in some aspects of organised faith but not in others. ACROSTIC ? An acrostic poem is one that uses the first letters of each line to spell out a word or phrase. More uncommonly, you can find a word or phrase through the centre of a poem (when it is called a mesostich) or at the end of the lines (which makes it a telestich).If the poem is written so that the first letters and last letters both write out a message, it is known as a double acrostic. CENTO? A poem consisting only of lines from other poems. This, from the Italian word for patchwork, is almost a technique rather than a form, especially as it can be of any length, and any metre, and need not rhyme; however, as the finished poem is referred to as a cento, just as a sonnet is called a sonnet, it is a form. CLERIHEW?Named after its inventor, this is a four-line poem rhymed aabb; its first line i s the name of the subject of the poem, it often breaks into two sentences at the end of the second line, and the rhythm tends to be entertainingly irregular. DOUBLE-DACTYL? This one is normally reserved for nonsense verse. 8 lines, all consisting of two dactyls (hence the name). Line 1 is a nonsense word (such as ââ¬Å"higgledy-piggledyâ⬠), line 2 is someone's name, line 6 is a single six-syllable word, and lines 4 and 8 rhyme. OTTAVA RIMA?A stanza form often used for longer poems, most famously in Byron's ââ¬ËDon Juan', consisting of eight lines, usually in iambic pentameter, rhymed abababcc. PANTOUM? This can be of any length; it is a poem of four-line stanzas, in which the second and fourth lines of one stanza become the first and third of the next. The last stanza's second and fourth lines can be the first and third of the first stanza, either reversed or not, which locks the poem into a circle of repetitions or, as the poet Marilyn Hacker says, ââ¬Å"until it ends u p with its tail in its mouthâ⬠. ? SPENSERIAN STANZA? 8 lines of iambic pentameter, followed by 1 iambic hexameter (or alexandrine); rhyme scheme ababbcbccc. This is the stanza invented by Spenser in The Faerie Queene. TERZA RIMA? A poem in which each stanza is rhymed aba, with the inner rhyme from one stanza providing the outer rhymes for either the previous or subsequent stanza: aba bcb cdcâ⬠¦ or aba cac dcdâ⬠¦. The form can end in a single-line stanza, a couplet, or by referring back to the as-yet-unused rhyme from the first stanza.Free Verse ââ¬âà What free verse claims to be free from is the constraints of regular metre and fixed forms. This makes the poem free to find its own shape according to what the poet ââ¬â or the poem ââ¬â wants to say, but still allows him or her to use rhyme, alliteration, rhythms or cadences (etc) to achieve the effects that s/he feels are appropriate. There is an implicit constraint, however, to resist a regular metre in f ree verse ââ¬â a run of a regular metre will stand out awkwardly in an otherwise free poem.Sometimes known as vers libre, free verse has a long pedigree and is very common in contemporary poetry. Yet there are still voices that claim poetry is only poetry when it is formal verse, and would agree with Robert Frost who, when asked about free verse, said ââ¬Å"I'd just as soon play tennis with the net downâ⬠. Fans of free verse can counter with T S Eliot's insistence that ââ¬Å"no vers is libre for the man who wants to do a good jobâ⬠ââ¬â the net may be down, but this allows a poet (of either gender) to play to different rules.Simon Armitage's ââ¬ËYou're Beautiful', for example, creates for himself a set of rules that includes repeated words at the starts of phrases, rather than a structure of repeated sounds at the end of lines. G Garish ââ¬â Gay or colourful in a crude or vulgar manner. Garner ââ¬â To gather or store in or as if in a granary Gendarme à ¢â¬â A member of the police force of France or in countries formerly influenced or controlled by France. Germane ââ¬â describes ideas or information connected with and important to a particular subject or situation e. ââ¬Ëher remarks could not have been more germane to the discussion. ââ¬Ë Ghazal ââ¬â Mimi Khalvati, whose poem ââ¬ËGhazal' is the only poem so far to use a ghazal form in the Archive, defines it at the start of her reading of it: ââ¬Å"Ghazals are an old Persian form, and they're written in self-contained couplets with a monorhyme, sometimes one- (or two- or three-) word repeated phrase, like a refrain, and the last couplet is a signature couplet, in which the writer has to refer to themselves by name, or pseudonym, or by using some kind of wordplay on their name. In her ghazal, the repeated word is ââ¬Å"meâ⬠, the rhyme is on ââ¬Å"throughâ⬠, ââ¬Å"wooâ⬠, ââ¬Å"cueâ⬠, ââ¬Å"tattooâ⬠and so on, and the ââ¬Ësignature ' is in the reference to being ââ¬Å"twice the meâ⬠, or ââ¬ËMimi'. ?Like the haiku, the age of the form ââ¬â the ghazal can be traced back through a millennium ââ¬â and its translation into the English language mean that the ââ¬Ërules' have had significant variations over time. You may find some definitions insist that the subject of a ghazal should be love, and others that let the rhyme move to be earlier in the line than Khalvati's placement of it immediately before the refrain.Some insist that each couplet should be complete in itself, meaning that each stanza ends on a full stop, and can therefore have only a thematic connection to those either side. There are even some that do without the refrain, but these appear rare. The closed couplets, however, appear to be a necessity to the form. Gimcrack ââ¬â Cheap; shoddy. Grandiloquent ââ¬â Inflated, pompous or bombastic in style or expression. Grandiose ââ¬â Pretentiously grand or stately. Imposing in conception or execution. H Haiku ââ¬â A haiku is a brief Japanese form that has been adapted into English in various ways.Its usual definition is that it is a three-line poem, consisting of seventeen syllables split 5 ââ¬â 7 ââ¬â 5. Other criteria (such as a ââ¬Ëzen mood', a reference to a season, or the poem being divided by a word that implies some form of cutting) may be demanded, and may even replace the strict syllable count. John Stallworthy considers Ezra Pound's ââ¬ËIn a Station of the Metro' a haiku, as, although it has only two lines and considerably more than 17 syllables, it has the brief and direct presentation of an image that many haiku have.Hermeneutics ââ¬â The theory of interpretation, concerned with general problems of understanding the meaning of the texts. Heterogeneous ââ¬â Comprised of unrelated or differing parts or elements. Heteroglossia ââ¬â To describe the variety of voices and language found within a novel, and multiple refe rences found in a single voice. Hoary ââ¬â Having grey or white hair. 2 White or whitish in colour. Homunculus ââ¬â A miniature man; midget. 2 ââ¬â Early biological theory that a miniature man existed in fully-formed in the spermatozoon or egg.Hyperbole ââ¬â Figurative language that uses exaggeration for emphasis, like Iââ¬â¢m starving when you havenââ¬â¢t eaten in four hours, or Iââ¬â¢ve been waiting forever when thatââ¬â¢s impossible because you probably were born at some point, and forever was happening a long time before you were born. I Impeccant ââ¬â Not sinning; free from sin. Iambic pentameter ââ¬â Iambic pentameter is the name given to a line of verse that consists of five iambs (an iamb being one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed, such as ââ¬Å"beforeâ⬠).It has been a fundamental building block of poetry in English, used in many poems by many poets from the English Renaissance to the present day. ?As with any metre, it i s not necessary that every line should be entirely slavish in following the rhythm; in fact, being so could make the poem sound dull. Swapping, dropping or adding stressed and unstressed syllables will lend variety to a line without changing the underlying rhythm. Poems in iambic pentameter may or may not rhyme.Those that are written in continuous lines of unrhymed iambic pentameter are said to be in blank verse, while rhyming couplets in iambic pentameter may be called ââ¬Å"heroic coupletsâ⬠, particularly when each couplet closes a thought or sentence on its second line. Iconoclast ââ¬â Someone who attacks established or traditional concepts, principles, laws etc. 2 Destroyer of religious images or sacred images. Ides ââ¬â (in the Roman calendar) the 15th day in March, May, July, and October and the 13th day of each other month.Idiolect ââ¬â The variety or form or form of a language used by an individual. Idiopathy ââ¬â Any disease of unknown cause. Illusioni st ââ¬â Everything we need to make things happen, and that cause events are all present in the novel: all the causes and events can be traced. Imagery ââ¬â Imagery is the name given to the elements in a poem that spark off the senses. Despite ââ¬Å"imageâ⬠being a synonym for ââ¬Å"pictureâ⬠, images need not be only visual; any of the five senses (sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell) can respond to what a poet writes.Examples of non-visual imagery can be found in Ken Smith's ââ¬ËIn Praise of Vodka', where he describes the drink as having ââ¬Å"the taste of air, of wind on fields, / the wind through the long wet forestâ⬠, and James Berry's ââ¬ËSeashell', which puts the ââ¬Å"ocean sighsâ⬠right in a listener's ear. A poet could simply state, say, ââ¬Å"I see a treeâ⬠, but it is possible to conjure up much more specific images using techniques such as simile (ââ¬Å"a tree like a spiky rocketâ⬠), metaphor (ââ¬Å"a green cloud riding a poleâ⬠) or synechdoche (ââ¬Å"bare, black branchesâ⬠) ââ¬â each of these suggests a different kind of tree.Techniques, such as these, that can be used to create powerful images are called figurative language, and can also include onomatopoeia, metonymy and personification. One of the great pleasures of poetry is discovering a particularly powerful image; the Imagists of the early 20th century felt it was the most important aspect, so were devoted to finding strong images and presenting them in the clearest language possible. Of course, not every poem is an Imagist poe Immitigable ââ¬â Unable to be mitigated; relentless; unappeasable.Impasse ââ¬â A situation in which progress is blocked; an insurmountable difficulty. Impasto ââ¬â Paint applied thickly, so that brush and palette knife marks are evident. The technique of applying paint in this way. Impecunious ââ¬â Without money, penniless. Impediments ââ¬â A hindrance or obstruction. Imprecate ââ¬â To swear and curse, to blaspheme. In the Middle Ages one hour was equal to 480 ounces of sand, or 22,560 atoms. Inchoate ââ¬â Just beginning; incipient. 2 ââ¬â Undeveloped; immature; rudimentary.Incommode ââ¬â To bother, disturb, or inconvenience. Incommunicado ââ¬â Deprived of communication with other people, as while in solitary confinement. Incontrovertible ââ¬â Incapable of being contradicted or disputed; undeniable. Indeterminacy:à à The unknowable, undecidable, uncertain, or ambiguous in a text. Indeterminacy is related to gaps in a text, but are less obviously identifiable and are a quality of a reading or interpretation, not just the text. Indign ââ¬â Undeserving, unworthy.Innocuous ââ¬â Having little or no adverse or harmful effect; harmless. Innominate ââ¬â Having no name; nameless. Irony ââ¬â At its most basic, a difference or gap between the presentation/representation of something and its reality. In other words, when what som ething appears to be and what it is are not the same. Irony can be engaged or detached: Engaged irony uses the gaps between reality and representation to make a point or expose something; detached irony exploits gaps for immediate effect, like humor, satire or surface criticism.Irony can also occur at different levels of a text; for instance, verbal irony would occur at the level of the word or sentence, where double meanings come into play; dramatic irony would occur at the level of the plot, where events and action areà constructed in a way to take the reader in one direction while the reality is something else (a technique often found with 1st person unreliable narrators and 3rd person privileged narrators). Insuperable ââ¬â Incapable of being overcome. Interlocutor ââ¬â A person who takes part in a conversation. Internecine ââ¬â Mutually destructive or ruinous; maiming both or all sides: internecine war.Interpolate ââ¬â To insert or introduce (a comment, passa ge, etc) into (a conversation, text, etc). 2 To falsify or alter (a text, manuscript etc) by the later addition of spurious or worthless passages. Interpolation ââ¬â The act of interpolating. Intertextuality:à à In a text, implied references to orà implied influences from another text. This concept allows a reader to make links between genres, and to see how themes, plot, etc. may develop or change in relation or in light of that other text. Intractable / Intractability ââ¬â Difficult to influence or direct; difficult to solve (of problem).Intransigent ââ¬â Not willing to compromise; obstinate; obstinately maintaining an attitude. Irascible ââ¬â Prone to anger; easily provoked to anger; hot-tempered. Invidious ââ¬â Incurring or tending to arouse resentment, unpopularity etc. 2) unfair or offensively discriminating. Inviolable ââ¬â That must not or cannot be transgressed, dishonoured, or broken; to be kept sacred. Irony: the discrepancy between what is said and what is meant, what is said and what is done, what is expected or intended and what happens, what is meant or said and what others understand.Sometimes irony is classified into types: in situational irony, expectations aroused by a situation are reversed; in cosmic irony or the irony of fate, misfortune is the result of fate, chance, or God; in dramatic irony. the audience knows more than the characters in the play, so that words and action have additional meaning for the audience; Socratic irony is named after Socrates' teaching method, whereby he assumes ignorance and openness to opposing points of view which turn out to be (he shows them to be) foolish. J Joskin ââ¬â Country bumpkin.Juxtaposition ââ¬â an act or instance of placing close together or side by side, esp. for comparison or contrast. 2) the state of being close together or side by side à Juxtaposition ââ¬â when two contrasting ideas, images, phrases, descriptions are placed close together to emph asise their differences. K Kenning ââ¬â A kenning is a much-compressed form of metaphor, originally used in Anglo-Saxon and Norse poetry. In a kenning, an object is described in a two-word phrase, such as ââ¬Ëwhale-road' for ââ¬Ësea'. Some kennings can be more obscure than others, and then grow close to being a riddle.Judith Nicholls' ââ¬ËBluebottle' uses kennings as part of a larger poem, that is itself a riddle; Andrew Fusek Peters and Polly Peters go further, building a pair of poems both consisting entirely of kennings. Kunstlerroman ââ¬â Development of the artist through a novel similar in some respects to the Bildungsroman. L Lacustrine ââ¬â Of, growing in or dwelling in lakes. Lagan ââ¬â Goods or wreckage on the seabed. Langrage ââ¬â Shot used to damage rigging. Laniferous ââ¬â Wool bearing. Larceny ââ¬â A technical word for theft (Larcenous). Larrikin ââ¬â Rowdy street hooligan.Lepidopterist ââ¬â A person who collects or studies m oths and butterflies. Lugubrious ââ¬â Excessively mournful; doleful. Lyric Poetry:a short poem with one speaker (not necessarily the poet) who expresses thought and feeling. Though it is sometimes used only for a brief poem about feeling (like the sonnet). it is more often applied to a poem expressing the complex evolution of thoughts and feeling, such as the elegy, the dramatic monologue, and the ode. The emotion is or seems personal In classical Greece, the lyric was a poem written to be sung, accompanied by a lyre. MMaculation ââ¬â A pattern of spots as on certain plants and animals. Maelstrom ââ¬â A large powerful whirlpool 2) Any turbulent confusion. Magniloquent ââ¬â (of speech) Lofty in style. Malaise ââ¬â A feeling of unease, mild sickness, or depression. Manumit ââ¬â To free from slavery, servitude, etc. ; emancipation. Manumission. Manumitter. Maudlin ââ¬â Foolishly tearful or sentimental, as when drunk. Maunder ââ¬â To move, talk, or walk a imlessly or idly. Maundy ââ¬â The ceremony of washing the feet of the poor. (Christianity). Mawkish ââ¬â Falsely sentimental, esp. in a weak or maudlin way. Melliferous ââ¬â Forming or producing honey.Meretricious ââ¬â Superficially or garishly attractive. 2 ââ¬â Insincere: meretricious praise. Metafictional ââ¬â Fiction about fiction; or more esp a kind of fiction that openly comments on its own fictional status. Metaphor ââ¬â An expression which describes a person or object in a literary way by referring to something that is considered to have similar characteristics to the person or object you are trying to describe. (Noun) Metre ââ¬â Metre is from the Greek word for measuring; at its most basic, metre is a system of describing what we can measure about the audible features of a poem.The systems that have been used in history to structure metres are: the number of syllables (syllabic); the duration of syllables (quantitative); the number of stresse d syllables, or accents (accentual); and combinations of the above. English is not a language that works easily in quantitative metre (although this has not stopped people trying), and it has developed an accentual-syllabic metre for its formal verse. This means that, in a formal poem, the poet will be counting the syllables, the stresses, and keeping them to a pattern.To describe the pattern, the stressed and unstressed syllables are gathered into groups known as feet, and the number of feet to a line gives a name thus: 1 foot: monometer? 2 feet: dimeter? 3 feet: trimeter? 4 feet: tetrameter? 5 feet: pentameter? 6 feet: hexameter? 7 feet: heptameter? 8 feet: octameter Lines of less than 3 or more than 6 feet are rare in formal poems. The pattern of the syllables within a foot is also noted. A foot that is one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one, for example, is an iamb; three of these in a row would be an iambic trimeter, while five make the famous iambic pentameter.All the common feet are outlined under ââ¬ËFoot' in the glossary. Like the rhythm in a piece of music, the metre is an underlying structure. Poets often slip in extra feet, or remove them, or change stress patterns around to prevent monotony, like playing rubato. (Sometimes a poem seems to be exploring how far a line can be pushed without losing all connection with the underlying metre. ) This means that the discovery of a foot other than an iamb in the middle of what is otherwise iambic, say, does not stop the poem from being ambic; rather the attention ends up lingering at that point, so the word on the different foot ends up more powerful as it has the attention longer. An example of this can be found in Peter Dale's ââ¬ËHalf-Light'; he writes ââ¬Å"I'm trying not to give another glance. / Lit window thirty years back up that path. â⬠The first line is a perfectly regular iambic pentameter, but the second introduces an extra stress on ââ¬Å"Litâ⬠, so that what the s peaker's trying not to be drawn to seems more powerful, perhaps helping us empathise with him when he does look back and ââ¬Å"catch her eye an instantâ⬠.Metonymy ââ¬â where one term is used in place of something else that it is related to or often associated with; like saying the White House for the president, or Hollywood for the American film industry. Mimetic ââ¬â Mimics the real world; the text behaves formally in a way to report the world outside. You look at objects and describe how the physical senses receive them. Mithridate ââ¬â A substance believed to be an antidote to every poison and a cure for every disease. Mitigated ââ¬â To make or become less severe or harsh.Mobius Strip ââ¬â A one sided continuous surface, made by twisting a long narrow rectangular strip of material through 180à ° and joining the ends. Mobocracy ââ¬â Rule or domination by a mob. Modernism ââ¬â Loosely, a term referring to experimental and avant- garde trends in li terature and other arts in the early 20th century, which resulted from conscious rejections of traditional 19th century artistic conventions like realism and traditional verse forms. Some of the experimental forms include symbolism, expressionism, and surrealism, and some narrative innovations include stream-of-consciousness and multiple points of view.A problematic term, since we are always already in the modern moment. Morass ââ¬â Swamp; something that entangles, impedes or confuses. Moribund ââ¬â Near-death, stagnant, without force or vitality. Moribundity, moribundly. Munificent ââ¬â Very liberal in giving or bestowing; very generous; lavish. Myopia / Myopic ââ¬â Inability to see distant objects clearly because images are focused in front of the retina. N Nacreous ââ¬â Relating to or consisting of mother-of-pearl. 2) Having the lustre of mother-of-pearl. Naturalism ââ¬â Is sometimes claimed to give a more accurate depiction of life than realism.It is a mo de of fiction that was developed by a school of writers in accordance with a particular philosophical thesis. The thesis, a product of post-Darwinian biology in the nineteenth century, held that human beings exist entirely in the order of nature and does not have a soul nor any mode of participating in a religious or spiritual world beyond the natural world; and therefore, that such a being is merely a higher-order animal whose character and behaviour are entirely determined by two kinds of forces, heredity and environment.A person inherits compulsive instincts ââ¬â especially hunger, and the drive to accumulate possessions, and sexuality ââ¬â and is then subject to the social and economic forces in the family, the class, and the milieu into which that person is born. The novel is organized in a mode of a scientific experiment on the behaviour of the characters it depicts. Naturalist writers try to present their subjects with scientific objectivity and with elaborate documen tation, sometimes including an almost medical frankness about activities and bodily functions usually unmentioned in earlier literature.They tend to choose characters that exhibit a strong animalistic drive towards greed and sexual desire and who are helpless victims both of glandular excretions and of sociological pressures without. The end is usually tragic, not in the Elizabethan sense, but of a losing struggle of the individual mind and will against gods, enemies, and circumstances. Instead the protagonist is a pawn to multiple compulsions, and usually disintegrates or is wiped out. OObdurately/ Obdurate ââ¬â Not easily moved by feelings or supplication; hard-hearted, impervious to persuasion, esp moral persuasion. Objectivist ââ¬â Humans are treated as objects ââ¬â subjects should be treated as objects. Occlude ââ¬â To block up or stop up (a passage or opening). Ode ââ¬â An ode is a lyric poem, usually addressing a particular person or thing. It originated i n Ancient Greece, and the Pindaric ode (so-called because it was written by the Theban poet Pindar, 518 ? 442 BC) was based on a pattern of three stanzas called the strophe, antistrophe and epode.It was performed by a chorus, which walked along one side of the orchestra chanting the strophe and down the other side chanting the antistrophe, then came to a standstill before the audience and chanted the epode. This performance was repeated with each set of three stanzas. The Horatian ode (invented by the Latin poet Horace in about 65 BC) was adopted in the early 19th century by John Keats for one of his most famous poems, ââ¬ËOde to a Nightingale'. Many modern odes, however, are irregular in form, such as ââ¬ËIntimations of Immortality' from ââ¬ËRecollections of Early Childhood' by William Wordsworth.While the ode does not necessarily have a regular metre or fixed rhyme scheme, Kit Wright's tongue-in-cheek Ode to Didcot Power Station uses both ââ¬â as well as a repertoire of old-fashioned language ââ¬â to parody the lofty style traditionally associated with this form. As Wright says in his introduction, ââ¬Å"if you're going to have an ode, why not go the whole hog? â⬠Oeuvre ââ¬â A work of art, literature, music etc. Oligarchy ââ¬â Government by a small group of people. Olivaceous ââ¬â Of an olive colour. Onomatopoeia ââ¬â Onomatopoeia is the forming and use of words and phrases to mitate or suggest the sounds they describe, such as bang, whisper, cuckoo, splash and fizz. Onomatopoeia is one of the resources of language more often used by poets than prose writers; this is because poetry is made for the ear as well as the eye, and depends more heavily than prose does on sound-effects. Spike Milligan's ââ¬ËOn the Ning Nang Nong' makes heavy use of onomatopoeia, but it can play a role in classic poetry too ââ¬â an example is the use of ââ¬Å"Crash'dâ⬠to describe the noise of battle in Tennyson's ââ¬ËThe Charge of the Heavy Brigade'.Opulence ââ¬â Having or indicating wealth. Abundant or plentiful. Overslaugh ââ¬â To pass over or disregard (a person) by giving a promotion, position, etc, to another instead. Oxymoron ââ¬â Oxymoron is a figure of speech in which two terms appear to contradict each other. Some examples have become so familiar that we hardly notice the contradiction, eg deafening silence. The word comes from the Greek: oxus (ââ¬Ësharp') and moros (ââ¬Ëfoolish'). P Paladins ââ¬â One of the legendary twelve peers of Charlemagneââ¬â¢s court. 2) A knightly champion.Parody ââ¬â Parody is the imitation of the style of another work, writer or genre, which relies on deliberate exaggeration to achieve comic or satirical effect. It is usually necessary to be familiar with the original in order to appreciate the parody, though some parodies have become better known than the poems they imitate. Pastiche ââ¬â A work of art that mixes styles, materials etc. 2) A work of art that imitates the style of another artist or period. Pathos ââ¬â Pathos is part of a poem or other work of art which makes the reader or audience feel sorrow or pity.The Greek word pathos means ââ¬Ësuffering'. Pathos is a key skill for any writer, and a highly effective feature of many poems, often in those cases where it is somewhat restrained or understated. Poetry has a special reputation for being able to move us. On the other hand, a clumsy or exaggerated attempt at pathos can result instead in bathos or over-sentimentality or make the reader feel manipulated. Pedant ââ¬â A person who relies too much on academic learning or who is concerned chiefly with insignificant detail. Pedantry ââ¬â The habit or an instance of being a pedant, esp. in the display of useless knowledge or minute observance of petty rules or details. Peregrinate ââ¬â To travel or wander about from place to place. Peripatetic ââ¬â Of or relating to the teachings of Arist otle (384-322B. C. ), Greek philosopher who used to teach whilst walking about. Peripeteia, Peripetia ââ¬â (esp. in drama) an abrupt turn of events or reversal. Persona ââ¬â A persona is a fictional character. Sometimes the term means the mask or alter-ego of the author; it is often used for first person works and lyric poems, to distinguish the writer of the work from the character in the work.Personification ââ¬â in which a concept, idea, object or animal is given human qualities (think of every Bugs Bunny cartoon you ever saw). Perspicuity ââ¬â The quality of being perspicuous. Perspicuous ââ¬â (of speech or writing) ââ¬â easily understood; lucid. Pertinacious ââ¬â Doggedly resolute in purpose or belief; unyielding. Planchette ââ¬â A heart-shaped board on wheels with a pencil attached that writes messages under supposed spirit guidance. Platitude ââ¬â A trite, dull or obvious remark or statement; common place. 2 Staleness or insipidity of thoug ht or language; triteness.Pogroms ââ¬â An organised persecution or extermination of an ethnic group, esp of Jews. Polemic ââ¬â Of or involving dispute or controversy. Politburo ââ¬â The executive and policy-making committee of a communist party. Politic ââ¬â Artful or shrewd; ingenious: a politic manager. Pollard ââ¬â An animal, such as a sheep or deer, that has either shed its horns or antlers or has had them removed. Polled ââ¬â (of animals) having the horns cut off or being naturally hornless. Pollinosis ââ¬â Technical name for hay fever. Polymath ââ¬â A person of great and varied learning.Posit ââ¬â To assume or put forward as fact or the factual basis for an argument; postulate. Postmodernism ââ¬â Involves not only the continuation, sometimes carried to an extreme, of the countertraditional experiments of modernism, but also attempts to break away form the modernist forms which had, inevitably, become conventional, as well as to overthrow the elitism of modernist ââ¬Å"high artâ⬠by recourse to the models of ââ¬Å"mass cultureâ⬠in film, television, newspaper cartoons, and popular music. Prescience ââ¬â nowledge of events before they take place; foresight. Presentiment ââ¬â A sense of something about to happen.Probabilistic ââ¬â Gives us a sample that seems most probable; it gives us a slice of life; it makes sure we feel this is a typical representation of the world therefore when they do something out of the norm it is significant. (Humanist tradition = man is the measure of all things). Realism creates situations where humans control everything; otherwise it exceeds the realms of probability. Prolepses ââ¬â Slowing down/ speeding up of events and other distortions of the linear sequence. Prolix ââ¬â Wordy, extending to great length. 2) Tending to speak or write at excessive length.Propitious ââ¬â Presenting favourable circumstances or conditions. 2) Favourably inclinded; gracio us; benevolent. Prose poetry ââ¬â A prose poem is a poem that does not use line breaks. This still allows the poet to use alliteration, metaphor, ambiguity, personification, and many other poetic techniques, but it can still be strange to see a poem that goes all the way to the right-hand margin. One thing that may differentiate a prose poem from a very short story is that the latter will have a stronger preference for narrative than the former, but this is very much debatable.John Ashbery's ââ¬ËFor John Clare' is a good example, one that explores the contrast between openness and containment; as John Clare was a poet who was devoted to nature, but locked in an asylum, it could be suggested that it is very appropriate to see the subject explored without the containment that line-endings would give. Prosody ââ¬â The study and notation of metre. Protagonist ââ¬â The protagonist is the main character, who is not necessarily a hero or a heroine. The antagonist is the oppo nent; the antagonist may be society, nature, a person, or an aspect of the protagonist.The antihero, a recent type, lacks or seems to lack heroic traits. Providence ââ¬â Is the idea that good can come out of evil. Purulent ââ¬â Of relating to, or containing pus. Q R Raucous ââ¬â (of voices or cries) Harshly or hoarsely load. Reactionary ââ¬â Reactionist ââ¬â of relating to or characterised by reaction, esp against radical political or social change. Realism ââ¬â Realistic fiction is said to oppose Romanticism. The romance is said to present life as we would have it be ââ¬â more picturesque, fantastic, adventurous, or heroic than actuality; realism is said to present life as it really is.Realistic fiction is written to give the effect that it represents real life and the social world as it appears to the common reader, evoking the sense that the characters actually exist, and that such things might actually happen. Techniques used include the use of the â â¬Ëcommonplace everyday setting,ââ¬â¢ represented in minute detail. Events, whether ordinary or extraordinary are all rendered in the same matter-of-fact, circumstantial and seemingly unselective way. Recondite ââ¬â Difficult to understand; abstruse. ) concerned with obscure subject matter. Refrain ââ¬â A refrain is a repeated part of a poem, particularly when it comes either at the end of a stanza or between two stanzas. Sebastian Barker's ââ¬ËThe Uncut Stone' has a traditional refrain, consisting of two rhymed sentences that never change at the end of each stanza; James Fenton uses a slightly looser type of refrain in ââ¬ËIn Paris With You', where the title returns at the end of almost every stanza, but with slight additions so that it continues the sentence of which it is a part.Some forms, such as villanelles, demand a refrain as part of their definitions. With every line repeated, a pantoum might be said to be made entirely of refrains, but this would be an u nusual usage, as refrains tend to be thought of as a moment of repetition within an otherwise flowing poem. Regicidal ââ¬â The person who kills a king. Regicide ââ¬â The killing of a king. Requiem ââ¬â A mass celebrated for the dead ââ¬â 2 ââ¬â Any piece of music composed or performed as a memorial to a dead person or persons.Rhyme ââ¬â Rhyme is the repetition of the end-sounds of words. Examples include Valerie Bloom's use of ââ¬Å"trampâ⬠and ââ¬Å"campâ⬠in ââ¬ËThe River', Roger McGough's use of ââ¬Å"breathâ⬠and ââ¬Å"deathâ⬠in ââ¬ËOxygen', and Peter Porter's rhyme of a single-syllable word with a polysyllable, ââ¬Å"starsâ⬠with ââ¬Å"particularsâ⬠, in ââ¬ËSo, Francis, Where's the Sun? ââ¬Ë. Each of these is an example of end-rhyme, which means the rhyme occurs at the end of a line, but rhyme can also happen within a line, where it is known as internal rhyme.A rhyme on a stressed syllable, as in the examp les above, is sometimes referred to as ââ¬Ëmasculine rhyme'; its counterpart, feminine rhyme, is made up of a stressed syllable followed by one or more unstressed syllables, such as ââ¬Å"fishesâ⬠and ââ¬Å"wishesâ⬠in Charles Causley's ââ¬ËAt the British War Cemetery, Bayeux'. These near-exact repetitions of end-sounds are known as full rhyme (sometimes as perfect, true or exact rhyme).There are also various forms of near-rhymes (half-rhymes, slant-rhymes, pararhymes), which are not exact repetitions, but are close enough to resonate, as David Harsent's use of ââ¬Å"supperâ⬠and ââ¬Å"blubberâ⬠as rhymes in ââ¬ËMarriage: XVI', or P J Kavanagh's ââ¬Å"happyâ⬠/ ââ¬Å"Cavafyâ⬠in ââ¬ËPerfection Isn't Like A Perfect Story'. Further types of rhyme include eye-rhyme, which looks like it should rhyme but doesn't (e. g. through / although), and rime riche, in which the words that rhyme sound identical (e. g. hare / hair).Rhyme can be used pu rely for its own sake, because it sounds good, but there may also be further reasons; for example, the form of terza rima has overlapping rhymes that give the poem forward motion, as in George Szirtes' ââ¬ËPreston North End', each stanza's middle line giving the rhyme for the outer two lines of the next stanza. The ââ¬Å"breathâ⬠/ ââ¬Å"deathâ⬠rhyme, noted above, is not only nice in the ears but resonates because these two concepts are linked, as they are in the poem. Ribald / Ribaldry ââ¬â Coarse, obscene, or licentious, usually in a humorous or mocking wayâ⬠¦ SSacrosanct ââ¬â Very sacred or holy; inviolable. Sadomasochism ââ¬â The combination of sadistic and masochistic elements in one person, characterised by both aggressive and submissive periods in relationships with others. Sagittal ââ¬â Resembling an arrow; straight. Sagittate ââ¬â Shaped like the head of an arrow (esp. , of leaves). Salacious ââ¬â Lustful, lecherous. Salient â⬠â Prominent, conspicuous, or a striking salient feature. Sallow ââ¬â (human skin) ââ¬â Of an unhealthy yellow. Salutary ââ¬â Salubrious (healthy) ââ¬â producing good effects; beneficial. Saprozoic ââ¬â (of animals or plants) ââ¬â feeding on dead organic matter.Sardonic ââ¬â Characterised by satire, mockery, or derision (sardonically). Sasquatch ââ¬â (In Canadian folklore) ââ¬â In British Columbia, a hairy beast or manlike monster said to leave huge footprints. Scansion ââ¬â The individual metrical pattern of a particular line or poem. Schism ââ¬â The division of a group into opposing factions. 3 Division within or separation from an established church especially the Roman Catholic Church, not necessarily involving differences in doctrine. Self-reflexive ââ¬â A term applied to literary works that openly reflect upon their own processes of artful composition; how they are written put together.Senescence / senescent ââ¬â 1) Growing Old 2) Characteristic of old age. Sententious ââ¬â Characterised or full of aphorisms, terse, pithy sayings, or axioms, tending to indulge in pompous moralising. Sentient / Sentience ââ¬â Having power of sense perception or sensation, conscious. Sestina ââ¬â A sestina is a form that uses six six-line stanzas, each using the same six words at the end of its lines in different orders, followed by an envoi of three lines using two of those words to each line. They tend to be written in iambic pentameter, and without rhyme.Later sestinas sometimes allow homophones ââ¬â such as ââ¬Ëhare' and ââ¬Ëhair' ââ¬â for the repeat words, or even looser interpretations. Simile ââ¬â (The use of) an expression comparing one thing with another, always including the words ââ¬Ëas' or ââ¬Ëlike'. (noun) Sjuzhet ââ¬â How the events are arranged and related to the narrative sequence. Solecism ââ¬â The non-standard use of a grammatical construction. 2) A violation of good manners. Solipsism / solipsist / solipsistic ââ¬â Philosophy ââ¬â the extreme form of scepticism which denies the possibility of any knowledge other than oneââ¬â¢s own existence. onnet ââ¬â A sonnet, in English poetry, is a poem of fourteen lines, usually in iambic pentameter, that has one of two regular rhyme schemes ââ¬â although there are a couple of exceptions, and years of experimentation that have loosened this definition. One of these schemes is known as the Petrarchan, after the Italian poet Petrarch; it consists of a group of eight lines, rhymed abbaabba, followed by a group of six lines with different rhymes. The distribution of these rhymes can vary, including cdcede, cdecde, cdedce, or even cdcdcd.Often, at the point where the eight-line section, known as the octave, turns into the six-line section, or sestet, there is a volta, from the Italian for ââ¬Ëturn' ââ¬â this is a shift in the poem's tone, subject or logic that gains power from (or demands? ) the matching shift in its structure. The Shakespearean sonnet breaks into three quatrains, followed by a couplet, rhymed abab cdcd efef gg ââ¬â as the name suggests, this is the form Shakespeare used for his sonnets, although he did not invent it. In Shakespeare's usage, the three quatrains tend to make an argument in three stages, which the couplet will sum up or comment on.The main exceptions are the curtal sonnet, a form invented by Gerard Manley Hopkins that roughly maintains the 8:6 ratio over a ten-and-a-half line poem, and the Meredithian sonnet of 16 lines. The fact that these are still referred to as a curtal and a Meredithian sonnet, however, shows that they are not (yet? ) considered sonnets per se. There are also innumerable individual exceptions to the form ââ¬â a poet may refer to a poem as a sonnet because it meets some of the descriptions above, or even just because s/he says so.This means that calling a poem a sonnet is not necessarily to defi ne it strictly, but to say that it stands in relation to the long tradition of sonnets. Specious ââ¬â Apparently correct or true, but actually wrong or false. 2 Deceptively attractive in appearance. Spelunker ââ¬â A person whose hobby is the exploration of caves. Spurious ââ¬â Not genuine or real. 2 Having the appearance of another part but differing from it in origin (of plants). Stanza ââ¬â A stanza is a group of lines within a poem; the blank line between stanzas is known as a stanza break.Like lines, there is no set length to a stanza or an insistence that all stanzas within a poem need be the same length. However, there are names for stanzas of certain lengths: two-line stanzas are couplets; three-lines, tercets; four-lines, quatrains. (Rarer terms, like sixains and quatorzains, are very rarely used. ) Whether regular or not, the visual effect and, sometimes, the aural effect is one of uniting the sense of the stanza into one group, so poets can either let their sentences fit neatly within these groups, or create flow and tension by enjambing across the stanza breaks.Stentorian ââ¬â (of the voice) uncommonly loud. Stress ââ¬â Stress is the emphasis that falls on certain syllables and not others; the arrangement of stresses within a poem is the foundation of poetic rhythm. The process of working out which syllables in a poem are stressed is known as scansion; once a metrical poem has been scanned, it should be possible to see the metre. By way of example, the word ââ¬Å"produceâ⬠can be pronounced with the stress on either syllable ââ¬â a farmer may proDUCE carrots, which a greengrocer will sell as PRODuce.Similarly, the differently placed stress is what separates the English and American pronunciations of ââ¬Å"defenceâ⬠. Longer words may have more than one stress ââ¬â ââ¬Å"photographyâ⬠, for example, is stressed on both ââ¬Ë-tog-ââ¬Ë and ââ¬Ë-phy'. In some places, including the Oxford English Di ctionary, a difference is drawn between
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