Pete Gayde <pete.gayde@gmail.com>: Feb 25 11:15AM -0600 Mark Brader wrote: > the 4 decoys with the others. Answer for the decoys if you like > for fun, but for no points. > 1. Name it. Ottawa; Winnipeg > 2. Name it. If the photographer had turned around, they would > have seen this city's most recognizable landmark. Ottawa > 3. Name this western Canadian city that's known locally, for > obvious reasons, as the City of Bridges. Fraser; Kelowna > 4. (decoy) > 5. (decoy) > 6. Name it. Quebec > 7. Name it. This city is also in western Canada. Calgary; Edmonton > 8. Name it. Montreal; Toronto > 9. Name it. Montreal > 10. (decoy) > 11. Name it. Winnipeg; Calgary > 12. Name it. Vancouver > 13. (decoy) > 14. Name this city in Ontario. The building on the left is one > of its newer landmarks. Windsor > 1. The verse form used in the oldest English poetry, including > "Beowulf". Chaucer's work was influenced by it, although his > verse was rhymed and had fixed meter. Blank verse; Free verse > 2. A verse form consisting of unrhymed iambic pentameter, this is > the meter of "Paradise" Lost as well as Shakespeare's plays. Free verse; Blank verse > A-B-B-A A-B-B-A and a "sestet" of 6 lines whose rhyme pattern > varies, but is most often C-D-E-C-D-E or C-D-C-D-C-D. A turn -- > a shift in pattern or mood -- occurs after the octet. Ottava rima; Sestina > Sang a paean > To love and pain > And ladies layin'. Clerihew; Ghazal > 5. A stately lyric form, often on a serious theme, it incorporates > various types of versification. Different variants of this > form are known as Pindaric, Sapphic, and Horatian. Ode > "Ode to the West Wind": any number of three-line stanzas, or > "tercets", concluding with a couplet. The tercets have an > interlocking rhyme: A-B-A, B-C-B, C-D-C, and so on. Ottava rima; Sestina > 7. A short stanza of 4 or 5 lines that ends a ballade and some > other medieval verse forms. Originally, it stated the poem's > dedication. Dithyramb; Tercet > 8. A rhyming couplet, usually end-stopped (meaning that each line > ends with punctuation and the couplet often forms a sentence), > written in iambic pentameter. Alexander Pope used these. Dithyramb > and fourth stanzas; the third line of the poem is also the last > line of the third and fifth stanzas. These two repeated lines > also end the poem. Villanelle > stanza. All six words are used in the final 3 lines (but three > are "buried" within it, and the other three are used as the > end words). Sestina Pete Gayde |
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