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  1. Dictionary
    poetry
    /ˈpəʊɪtri/

    noun

    • 1. literary work in which the expression of feelings and ideas is given intensity by the use of distinctive style and rhythm; poems collectively or as a genre of literature: "he felt a desire to investigate through poetry the subjects of pain and death"

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  2. Sep 14, 2024 · Poetry, literature that evokes a concentrated imaginative awareness of experience or an emotional response through language chosen and arranged for its meaning, sound, and rhythm. Poetry is a vast subject, as old as history, present wherever religion is present, and possibly the primal form of languages themselves.

  3. Sep 14, 2024 · Poetry - Form, Rhyme, Meter: People’s reason for wanting a definition is to take care of the borderline case, and this is what a definition, as if by definition, will not do.

  4. Poetry is a type of literature, or artistic writing, that attempts to stir a reader’s imagination or emotions. The poet does this by carefully choosing and arranging language for its meaning, sound, and rhythm. Some poems, such as nursery rhymes, are simple and humorous.

  5. Poetry is much harder to define, though it is perhaps more recognizable than other literary forms. In print poetry has a markedly different appearance from other types of literature. This difference may help to define the characteristics that separate it from the other types.

  6. POETRY meaning: 1 : the writings of a poet poems; 2 : something that is very beautiful or graceful

  7. Sep 14, 2024 · Poetry - Form, Rhyme, Meter: People nowadays who speak of form in poetry almost always mean such externals as regular measure and rhyme, and most often they mean to get rid of these in favour of the freedom they suppose must follow upon the absence of form in this limited sense.

  8. Sep 11, 2024 · Epic, long narrative poem recounting heroic deeds, although the term has also been loosely used to describe novels, such as Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace, and motion pictures, such as Sergey Eisenstein’s Ivan the Terrible. In literary usage, the term encompasses both oral and written compositions.

  9. English literature - Poetry, Verse, Sonnets: The last flickerings of New Apocalypse poetry—the flamboyant, surreal, and rhetorical style favored by Dylan Thomas, George Barker, David Gascoyne, and Vernon Watkins—died away soon after World War II.

  10. Sep 20, 2024 · The second phase of Romanticism, comprising the period from about 1805 to the 1830s, was marked by a quickening of cultural nationalism and a new attention to national origins, as attested by the collection and imitation of native folklore, folk ballads and poetry, folk dance and

  11. Sonnet, fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of 14 lines that are typically five-foot iambics rhyming according to a prescribed scheme. The form seems to have originated in the 13th century among the Sicilian school of court poets, who were influenced by the love poetry of Provencal troubadours.