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ANTONII [103]
3 years ago
11

Drag the tiles to the correct boxes to complete the pairs. Match the correct poetry form to the definition. Open form blank vers

e free verse closed form Definition Poetry Form These poems do not follow any rules. Authors use various elements to communicate their intended meaning. ArrowRight These poems have a relatively loose structure when it comes to length, meter, rhyme, or syntax. ArrowRight These poems are written in iambic pentameter, a meter commonly used in poetry and verse drama. ArrowRight These poems follow specific patterns in terms of rhyme, meter, and length. ArrowRight
English
2 answers:
JulijaS [17]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

1. Open form - These poems have a relatively loose structure when it comes to length, meter, rhyme, or syntax.

2. Blank verse - These poems are written in iambic pentameter, a meter commonly used in poetry and verse drama.

3. Free verse - These poems do not follow any rules. Authors use various elements to communicate their intended meaning.

4. Closed form - These poems follow specific patterns in terms of rhyme, meter, and length.

Explanation:

A poem that presents an open form does not observe the rules strictly. It may present some metric, it may establish some rhythm, but nothing to the point of having a fixed pattern throughout the whole work.

Free verse is a type of poem that does not follow any rules for meter or rhyme schemes at all. NOTE: You will find books and sites that use "free verse" and "open form" as synonyms.

Blank verse happens when the lines do not rhyme, but they do present a regular metric pattern - usually, iambic pentameter.

Finally, a poem that has closed form presents a fixed, rigid pattern for rhythm, rhyme, and metrics from beginning to ending.

Explanation:

Paha777 [63]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

<u>1. Open form - These poems have a relatively loose structure when it comes to length, meter, rhyme, or syntax.</u>

<u>2. Blank verse - These poems are written in iambic pentameter, a meter commonly used in poetry and verse drama.</u>

<u>3. Free verse - These poems do not follow any rules. Authors use various elements to communicate their intended meaning.</u>

<u>4. Closed form - These poems follow specific patterns in terms of rhyme, meter, and length. </u>

Explanation:

A poem that presents an open form <u>does not observe the rules strictly</u>. It may present some metric, it may establish some rhythm, but nothing to the point of having a fixed pattern throughout the whole work.

Free verse is a type of poem that<u> does not follow any rules for meter or rhyme schemes </u>at all. NOTE: You will find books and sites that use "free verse" and "open form" as synonyms.

Blank verse happens when<u> the lines do not rhyme</u>, but they do<u> present a regular metric pattern</u> - usually, iambic pentameter.

Finally, a poem that has closed form presents a <u>fixed, rigid pattern for rhythm, rhyme, and metrics</u> from beginning to ending.

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