- Alliteration: A number of words with the same beginning consonant sound that appear close together in sequence.
- e.g., *The dancing damsel dazzled the crowd.*
- Assonance: A repetition of similar vowel sounds in words close to each other in a sentence.
- e.g., *"Oh, please let her go."*
- Dialect: A regional variety of language with spelling, grammar, and pronunciation that differentiates a population from others around them.
- e.g., *"There's five of them dirty ducks flappin' out and about, sir!"*
- Euphony: The use of words and phrases that are pleasing to the ear by using long vowel sounds, harmonious constants (l, m, n, r, f, v), and soft consonants or semi-vowels (w, s, y, th, wh).
- e.g., *"The velvet…it's so lovely, and so very soft…"*
- Onomatopoeia: A word which imitates a sound effect.
- e.g., *The cat meowed as he looked on with adoring eyes that tore through my squealing heart.*
- Pun: A play on words that involve words with similar sounds but different meanings.
- e.g., *"Lettuce finish our salads."*
- Repetition: Using a phrase for emphasis multiple times within close proximity.
- e.g., *"I was too late. I was far too late. My dog…she tried her best."*
- Rhyme: A repetition of words whose end syllables sound similar.
- e.g., *Roses are red / Violets are blue / Your family is dead / And you will be too*
- Rhyme scheme: The rhyming pattern or structure at the end of each line of poetry.
- e.g., the above poem uses ABAB as its rhyme scheme.
- Rhythm: The usage of stressed and unstressed syllables to demonstrate patterns, especially in verses.
- Anapest: Three syllables, in which the first two are unstressed while the last is stressed.