Note
Sound is a very important element when we write a poem. We can't pick up a random sound, we need the chosen sounds. Because different words have different meanings, and they also have a different sound.
Ding dong theory: it maintains that the primitive elements of language are reflex expressions included by sensory impressions.
Alphabet families of sound: letters are divided into two general classes, vowels and consonants. Vowels and consonants are different because they formed differently.
When W and Y at the end of a syllable, they count as a vowel. Liquids: r, semivowels are l m n. Mute is a consonant that cannot be sounded at all without a vowel: k, p, t, in ak, ap, at. mute also has b, d, q, and c, and g hard.
We have to use a different phrase in different situations, although they have the same meaning, they have a different emotion. Such as Hush! Please be quiet! Shut up!
Ston and Rock are different. Although they have same vowel o, Stone has a mute near the beginning of the word then is softened by a vowel. Rock ends with the mute k.
I really like the poem named "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" I like the environment the author explains about
New Notes
Alliteration: is the repetition of the initial sound of words in a line or lines of verse. For examples" it bleeds, the clack blood of the blueberry. Sometimes alliteration includes the repetition of both initial sounds and interior sounds of words.
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds within words in a line or lines of verse, such repetition creates a near-rhyme. Assonance is less obvious than alliteration. In assonance, there are sibling sounds ---also cousins, second cousin, etc.
Onomatopoeia is the use of the word that, through its sound as well as its sense, represent what it defines.
Ding dong theory: it maintains that the primitive elements of language are reflex expressions included by sensory impressions.
Alphabet families of sound: letters are divided into two general classes, vowels and consonants. Vowels and consonants are different because they formed differently.
When W and Y at the end of a syllable, they count as a vowel. Liquids: r, semivowels are l m n. Mute is a consonant that cannot be sounded at all without a vowel: k, p, t, in ak, ap, at. mute also has b, d, q, and c, and g hard.
We have to use a different phrase in different situations, although they have the same meaning, they have a different emotion. Such as Hush! Please be quiet! Shut up!
Ston and Rock are different. Although they have same vowel o, Stone has a mute near the beginning of the word then is softened by a vowel. Rock ends with the mute k.
I really like the poem named "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" I like the environment the author explains about
New Notes
Alliteration: is the repetition of the initial sound of words in a line or lines of verse. For examples" it bleeds, the clack blood of the blueberry. Sometimes alliteration includes the repetition of both initial sounds and interior sounds of words.
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds within words in a line or lines of verse, such repetition creates a near-rhyme. Assonance is less obvious than alliteration. In assonance, there are sibling sounds ---also cousins, second cousin, etc.
Onomatopoeia is the use of the word that, through its sound as well as its sense, represent what it defines.
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