51 Types of Poetry: Poetry Technique Poetry Definition

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The text discusses over 50 different types and forms of poetry and provides definitions for many literary and poetic terms.

Some common poetic forms discussed include sonnets, odes, ballads, free verse, haiku, and rhyming couplets. Meter, rhyme schemes, and structural elements are also explained for different forms.

Literary devices defined include metaphor, simile, personification, synecdoche, and understatement. Meter, stress, and rhyme are also discussed as important poetic elements.

51 Types of Poetry

This article contains 51 types of poetry. These include all known (at least to my research) forms a poem

may take. If you wish to read more about poetry, these articles might interest you: poetry

technique and poetry definition

ABC
A poem that has five lines that create a mood, picture, or feeling. Lines 1 through 4 are made up
of words, phrases or clauses while the first word of each line is in alphabetical order. Line 5 is one
sentence long and begins with any letter.

Acrostic
Poetry that certain letters, usually the first in each line form a word or message when read in a
sequence.

Ballad
A poem that tells a story similar to a folk tail or legend which often has a repeated refrain. Read
more about ballads.

Ballade
Poetry which has three stanzas of seven, eight or ten lines and a shorter final stanza of four or
five. All stanzas end with the same one line refrain.

Blank verse
A poem written in unrhymed iambic pentameter and is often unobtrusive. The iambic pentameter
form often resembles the rhythms of speech.

Bio
A poem written about one self's life, personality traits, and ambitions.

Burlesque
Poetry that treats a serious subject as humor.

Canzone
Medieval Italian lyric style poetry with five or six stanzas and a shorter ending stanza.

Carpe diem
Latin expression that means 'seize the day.' Carpe diem poems have a theme of living for today.

Cinquain
Poetry with five lines. Line 1 has one word (the title). Line 2 has two words that describe the title.
Line 3 has three words that tell the action. Line 4 has four words that express the feeling, and
line 5 has one word which recalls the title. Read more about cinquain poetry.

Classicism
Poetry which holds the principles and ideals of beauty that are characteristic of Greek and Roman
art, architecture, and literature.

Couplet
A couplet has rhyming stanzas made up of two lines.

Dramatic monologue
A type of poem which is spoken to a listener. The speaker addresses a specific topic while the
listener unwittingly reveals details about him/herself.

Elegy
A sad and thoughtful poem about the death of an individual.

Epic
An extensive, serious poem that tells the story about a heroic figure.
Epigram
A very short, ironic and witty poem usually written as a brief couplet or quatrain. The term is
derived from the Greek epigramma meaning inscription.

Epitaph
A commemorative inscription on a tomb or mortuary monument written to praise the deceased.

Epithalamium (Epithalamion)
A poem written in honor of the bride and groom.

Free verse (vers libre)


Poetry written in either rhyme or unrhymed lines that have no set fixed metrical pattern.

Ghazal
A short lyrical poem that arose in Urdu. It is between 5 and 15 couplets long. Each couplet
contains its own poetic thought but is linked in rhyme that is established in the first couplet and
continued in the second line of each pair. The lines of each couplet are equal in length. Themes
are usually connected to love and romance. The closing signature often includes the poet's name
or allusion to it.

Haiku
A Japanese poem composed of three unrhymed lines of five, seven, and five morae, usually
containing a season word.

Horatian ode
Short lyric poem written in two or four-line stanzas, each with its the same metrical pattern,
often addressed to a friend and deal with friendship, love and the practice of poetry. It is named
after its creator, Horace.

Iambic pentameter
One short syllabel followed by one long one five sets in a row. Example: la-LAH la-LAH la-LAH la-
LAH la-LAH

Idyll (Idyl)
Poetry that either depicts a peaceful, idealized country scene or a long poem telling a story about
heroes of a bye gone age.

Irregular (Pseudo-Pindaric or Cowleyan) ode


Neither the three part form of the pindaric ode nor the two or four-line stanza of the Horatian
ode. It is characterized by irregularity of verse and structure and lack of coorespondence between
the parts.

Italian sonnet
A sonnet consisting of an octave with the rhyme pattern abbaabba followed by six lines with a
rhyme pattern of cdecde or cdcdcd.

Lay
A long narrative poem, especially one that was sung by medieval minstrels.

Limerick
A short sometimes vulgar, humorous poem consisting of five anapestic lines. Lines 1, 2, and 5
have seven to ten syllables, rhyme and have the same verbal rhythm. The 3rd and 4th lines have
five to seven syllables, rhyme and have the same rhythm.

List
A poem that is made up of a list of items or events. It can be any length and rhymed or
unrhymed.

Lyric
A poem that expresses the thoughts and feelings of the poet.

Memoriam stanza
A quatrain in iambic tetrameter with a rhyme scheme of abba -- named after the pattern used
by Lord Tennyson.

Name
Poetry that tells about the word. It uses the letters of the word for the first letter of each line.

Narrative
A poem that tells a story.

Ode
A lengthy lyric poem typically of a serious or meditative nature and having an elevated style and
formal stanza structure.

Pastoral
A poem that depicts rural life in a peaceful, romanticized way.

Petrarchan
A 14-line sonnet consisting of an octave rhyming abbaabba followed by a sestet of cddcee or
cdecde

Pindaric ode
A ceremonious poem consisting of a strophe (two or more lines repeated as a unit) followed by a
an antistrophe with the same metrical pattern and concluding with a summary line (an epode) in
a different meter. Named after Pindar, a Greek professional lyrist of the 5th century B.C.

Quatrain
A stanza or poem consisting of four lines. Lines 2 and 4 must rhyme while having a similar
number of syllables.

Rhyme
A rhyming poem has the repetition of the same or similar sounds of two or more words, often at
the end of the line.

Rhyme royal
A type of poetry consisting of stanzas having seven lines in iambic pentameter.

Romanticism
A poem about nature and love while having emphasis on the personal experience.

Rondeau
A lyrical poem of French origin having 10 or 13 lines with two rhymes and with the opening
phrase repeated twice as the refrain.

Senryu
A short Japanese style poem, similar to haiku in structure that treats human beings rather than
nature: Often in a humorous or satiric way.

Sestina
A poem consisting of six six-line stanzas and a three-line envoy. The end words of the first stanza
are repeated in varied order as end words in the other stanzas and also recur in the envoy.

Shakespearean
A 14-line sonnet consisting of three quatrains of abab cdcd efef followed by a couplet, gg.
Shakespearean sonnets generally use iambic pentameter.

Shape
Poetry written in the shape or form of an object.

Sonnet
A lyric poem that consists of 14 lines which usually have one or more conventional rhyme
schemes.

Tanka
A Japanese poem of five lines, the first and third composed of five syllables and the other seven.

Terza Rima
A type of poetry consisting of 10 or 11 syllable lines arranged in three-line tercets.

Verse
A single metrical line of poetry.

Villanelle
A 19-line poem consisting of five tercets and a final quatrain on two rhymes. The first and third
lines of the first tercet repeat alternately as a refrain closing the succeeding stanzas and joined
as the final couplet of the quatrain.

http://www.poemofquotes.com/articles/poetry_forms.php

English Poetry Terms


Poetry Terms are used when describing the content and structure of a poem. There are many
different terms used in the English language which help when constructing poetry such as the use
of metaphors and similes. If you want to enhance the content when you write poetry or increase
your knowledge of Poetry terms in general then study the content of this page. At the very least
you will most certainly increase your vocabulary!

• Accent
The prominence or emphasis given to a syllable or word. In the word poetry, the accent
(or stress) falls on the first syllable.
• Allegory
Allegory is a narrative having a second meaning beneath the surface one.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Alexandrine
A line of poetry that has 12 syllables and derives from a medieval romance about
Alexander the Great that was written in 12-syllable lines.
Poetry Terms
• Alliteration
The repetition of the same or similar sounds at the beginning of words such as tongue
twisters like 'She sells seashells by the seashore'
• Analogy
Analogy is a likeness or similarity between things that are otherwise unlike.
• Anapaest
A metrical foot of three syllables, two short (or unstressed) followed by one long (or
stressed). The anapaest is the opposite of the dactyl.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Antithesis
An example of antithesis is "To err is human, to forgive, divine." by Alexander Pope is an
example of antithesis with words and phrases with opposite meanings balanced against
each other.
Poetry Terms
• Apostrophe
A figure of speech in which someone absent or dead or something nonhuman is
addressed as if it were alive and present and could reply
• Archetype
Archetype is the original pattern from which copies are made.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Assonance
The repetition or a pattern of similar sounds, as in the tongue twister "Moses supposes
his toeses are roses."
• Bard
The definition of a Bard is a Gaelic maker and signer of poems.
• Blank verse
Blank verse is in unrhymed iambic pentameter which is a type of meter in poetry, in which
there are five iambs to a line.
• Cacophony
Lewis Carroll makes use of cacophony in 'Jabberwocky' by using an unpleasant spoken
sound created by clashing consonants.
Poetry Terms
• Caesura
A grammatical pause or break in a line of poetry (like a question mark), usually near the
middle of the line.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Classicism
The principles and ideals of beauty, minimised by the use of emotional restraint, that are
characteristic of Greek and Roman art and literature used by poets such as John Dryden
and Alexander Pope.
• Conceit
An example of a conceit can be found in Shakespeare's sonnet "Shall I compare thee to
a summer's day?" when an image or metaphor likens one thing to something else that is
seemingly very different.
Poetry Terms
• Consonance
Consonance is the repetition, at close intervals, of the final consonant sounds of
accented syllables or important words.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Connotation
connotation is What a word suggests beyond its basic definition. The words childlike and
childish both mean 'characteristic of a child,' but childlike suggests meekness and
innocence
• Couplet
Shakespearean sonnets usually end in a couplet and are a pair of lines that are the same
length and usually rhyme and form a complete thought.
Poetry Terms
• Dactyl
A metrical foot of three syllables, one long (or stressed) followed by two short (or
unstressed), as in happily. The dactyl is the reverse of the anapaest.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Denotation
Denotation is the basic definition or dictionary meaning of a word.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Dialect
Dialect refers to pronunciation of a particular region of a Country or region.
Poetry Terms
• Doggerel
Doggerels are a light verse which is humorous and comic by nature.
• Elision
Elision refers to the leaving out of an unstressed syllable or vowel, usually in order to
keep a regular meter in a line of poetry for example 'o'er' for 'over'.
Poetry and Literary Terms
• Enjambment
Enjambment comes from the French word for "to straddle." Enjambment is the
continuation of a sentence form one line or couplet into the next and derives from the
French verb 'to straddle'. An example by Joyce Kilmer is 'I think that I shall never see/A
poem as lovely as a tree'.
Poetry Terms
• Envoy
The shorter final stanza of a poem, as in a ballade.
Literary Terms
• Epithet
An epithetis a a descriptive expression, a word or phrase expressing some quality or
attribute.
• Euphony
Euphony refers to pleasant spoken sound that is created by smooth consonants such as
"ripple'.
Literary Terms
• Euphemism
Euphemism is the use of a soft indirect expression instead of one that is harsh or
unpleasantly direct. For example 'pass away' as opposed to 'die'
Literary Terms
• Falling Meter
Trochaic and dactylic meters are called falling meters because they move from stressed
to unstressed syllables.
Poetry Terms
• Feminine rhyme
A rhyme that occurs in a final unstressed syllable: pleasure/leisure, longing/yearning.
• Figure of speech
A verbal expression in which words or sounds are arranged in a particular way to achieve
a particular effect such as alliteration, antithesis, assonance, hyperbole, metaphor,
onomatopoeia and simile.
Literary Terms
• Foot
Two or more syllables that together make up the smallest unit of rhythm in a poem. For
example, an iamb is a foot that has two syllables, one unstressed followed by one
stressed. An anapest has three syllables, two unstressed followed by one stressed.
Literary Terms
• Form
Form is the generic term for the organising principle of a literary work. In poetry, form is
described in terms elements like rhyme, meter, and stanzaic pattern.
Literary Terms
• Heptameter
A line of poetry that has seven metrical feet.
Poetry Terms
• Heroic couplet
A stanza composed of two rhymed lines in iambic pentameter.
• Hexameter
A line of poetry that has six metrical feet.
Literary Terms
• Hyperbole
Hyperbole (overstatement) is a type of figurative language that depends on intentional
overstatement.
Literary Terms
• Iamb
A metrical foot of two syllables, one short (or unstressed) and one long (or stressed). The
lamb is the reverse of the trochee.
Poetry Terms
• Iambic pentameter
Shakespeare's plays were written mostly in iambic pentameter, which is the most
common type of meter in English poetry. It is a basic measure of English poetry, five
iambic feet in each line.
Poetry Terms
• Idiom
Idiom refers to words, phrases, or patterns of expression. Idioms became standard
elements in any language, differing from language to language and shifting with time. A
current idiom is 'getting in a car' but 'on a plane'.
Literary Terms
• Imagery
Imagery draws the reader into poetic experiences by touching on the images and senses
which the reader already knows.
Literary Terms
• Irony
Irony is a situation, or a use of language, involving some kind of discrepancy. An example
of this is ''Water, water everywhere but ne'er a drop to drink'.
Literary Terms
• Jargon
Jargon refers to words and phrases developed by a particular group to fit their own needs
which other people understand.
• Litotes
A litote is a figure of speech in which affirmative is expressed by the negation of the
opposite. "He's no dummy" is a good example.
Poetry Terms
• Metaphor
A metaphor is a pattern equating two seemingly unlike objects. An examples of a
metaphor is 'drowning in debt'.
• Meter
Meters are regularized rhythms. An arrangement of language in which the accents occur
at apparently equal intervals in time. Each repeated unit of meter is called a foot.
Literary Terms
• Meiosis
Meiosis is a figure of speech that consists of saying less than one means, or of saying
what one means with less force than the occasion warrants.
• Metonymy
A figure of speech in which one word is substituted for another with which it is closely
associated. Some significant aspect or detail of an experience is used to represent the
whole experience.
Poetry Terms
• Moritake
Maritime is figurative speech that depends on intentional overstatement or exaggeration.
• Onomatopoeia
A figure of speech in which words are used to imitate sounds. Examples of onomatopoeic
words can be found in numerous Nursery Rhymes e.g. clippety-clop and cock-a-doodle-
do.
Literary Terms
• Paradox
A paradox is a statement or situation containing apparently contradictory or incompatible
elements.
Literary Terms
• Pentameter
A line of poetry that has five metrical feet.
Poetry Terms
• Persona
Persona refers to the narrator or speaker of the poem, not to be confused with the author.
Literary Terms
• Personification
Personification means giving human traits to nonhuman or abstract things.
Literary Terms
• Quatrain
A stanza or poem of four lines.
Literary Terms
• Refrain
A phrase, line, or group of lines that is repeated throughout a poem, usually after every
stanza.
• Rhyme
The occurrence of the same or similar sounds at the end of two or more words.
Literary Terms
• Rhythm
Rhythm is significant in poetry because poetry is so emotionally charged and intense.
Rhythm can be measured in terms of heavily stressed to less stressed syllables. Rhythm
is measured in feet, units usually consisting of one heavily accented syllable and one or
more lightly accented syllable.
Poetry Terms
• Rising Meter
Anapaestic and iambic meters are called rising meters because they move from an
unstressed syllable to a stressed syllable.
Literary Terms
• Romanticism
The principles and ideals of the Romantic movement in literature and the arts during the
late 18th and early 19th centuries. Romanticism, which was a reaction to the classicism
of the early 18th century, favoured feeling over reason and placed great emphasis on the
subjective, or personal, experience of the individual. Nature was also a major theme. The
great English Romantic poets include Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats.
Literary Terms
• Scansion
The analysis of a poem's meter. This is usually done by marking the stressed and
unstressed syllables in each line and then, based on the pattern of the stresses, dividing
the line into feet.
• Simile
A figure of speech in which two things are compared using the word "like" or "as" to draw
attention to similarities about two things that are seemingly dissimilar.
Literary Terms
• Slang
Slang refers to highly informal and sub-standard vocabulary which may exist for some
time and then vanish. Some slang remains in usage long enough to become permanent,
but slang never becomes a part of formal diction.
• Spondee
A metrical foot of two syllables, both of which are long (or stressed).
Poetry Terms
• Stanza
Two or more lines of poetry that together form one of the divisions of a poem. The
stanzas of a poem are usually of the same length and follow the same pattern of meter
and rhyme.
Literary Terms
• Stress
Stress refers to the accent or emphasis, either strong or weak, given to each syllable in a
piece of writing, as determined by conventional pronunciation.
• Synecdoche
Synecdoche is a figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole.
• Syntax
Syntax refers to word order and sentence structure. Normal word order in English
sentences is firmly fixed in subject-verb-object sequence or subject-verb-complement. In
poetry, word order may be shifted around to meet emphasis, to heighten the connection
between two words, or to pick up on specific implications or traditions.
Literary Terms
• Tetrameter
A line of poetry that has four metrical feet.
Poetry Terms
• Trochee
A metrical foot of two syllables, one long (or stressed) and one short (or unstressed).
Literary Terms
• Trope
Trope is the use of a word or phrase in a sense different from its ordinary meaning.
Literary Terms
• Understatement
Understatement refers to the intentional downplaying of a situation's significance, often
for ironic or humorous effect.
• Verse
A single metrical line of poetry, or poetry in general (as opposed to prose).
Poetry Terms
• Versification
The system of rhyme and meter in poetry.
Poetry Terms

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