Alliterative
Epic
Acrostic
Haiku
westminster abbey
kent church
chapel at windsor
None of the above
Skeptical
Authoritative
Impressionistic
Both a & c
Get a stake in our business.
You cant have your cake and eat it, too
The snow was white as cotton.
Youre driving me crazy.
George Bernard Shaw
John Dryden
Christopher Marlowe
William Shakespeare
Personification
Hyperboles
Alliteration
Onomatopoeia
Betjeman
Hughes
Marvel
Larkin
Titus Andronicus
Macbeth
Hamlet
None of the above
William Shakespeare
Terry Saylor
Elizabeth b. Browning
Emily Dickinson
Prosody
Allegory
Scansion
Assonance
Geoffrey Chaucer
Dick Whittington
Thomas Lancaster
King Richard II
H. W. Longfellow
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Dylan Thomas
William Wordsworth
Carolyn Kizer
Mary Oliver
Sylvia Plath
Marianne Moore
Elliot
Kipling
Cummings
Brooke
Prosody
Potology
Rheumatology
Scansion
Metaphor
Synecdoche
Euphemism
Irony
Queen Cristina
Top Girls
Camille
The Homecoimg
2
4
1
5
French
Latin
Middle english
English
A poet of middleness
Capturing a sense of spiritual marooness
One of the leading prairie poets
Has some distinction as a critic
Light verse
Romantic
Political satire
War poems
William Blake
William Shakespeare
William Morris
William Wordsworth
a plot.
an character
an address
the point a writer is trying to make about a subject.
24
31
21
28
hundred years war
Black death
Peasant revolt
None of the above
french
latin
italian
english
Elizabeth Bishop
Sylvia Plath
Marianne Moore
Laura Jackson
No difference. Simply two different ways in referring to the same thing.
A simile is more descriptive.
A simile uses as or like to make a comparison and a metaphor doesnt.
A simile must use animals in the comparison.
Book of poetry
A radio play
A stage play
a short film
Glory
Ruin
Disaster
victory