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                68  QUATRAIN: A four-line stanza or poem that   72  STANZA: A pattern or grouping of lines in
                   usually rhymes; code—abcb, abab, abba (the     a poem—couplet (2 lines), tercet (3), quatrain
                   letters tell which lines rhyme with each other).   (4), quintet (5), sestet (6), septet (7),
                   EXAMPLES: “GOING BANANAS” and “THE             octave (8).
                   BASEBALL GAME.” Both have abcb quatrains.

                                                               73  TANKA: A Japanese form, which includes a
                69  RHYME: A repetition of sounds at the ends of   haiku and adds two more seven-syllable lines
                   words and usually at the end of a line: score/  to extend or change the meaning: 5-7-5-7-7.
                   four, flies/surprise, fuss/A+, “the kids       EXAMPLE: “SPEECHLESS”

                   creamed the teachers,/listen to the score:/the
                   third graders beat them—/twenty-five to     74  TERCET: A three-line, usually rhyming, poem
                   four!” No, a poem doesn’t have to rhyme.       or stanza. EXAMPLE: “PEAS”
                   Rhyme can boss you around—don’t let it. And
                   please, DO NOT throw in any dumb word just   75  TRIOLET: This eight-line form has one line
                   to rhyme. EXAMPLES: “GOING BANANAS,” “THE      that repeats three times. Lines 1, 4, and 7 are
                   BASEBALL GAME,” “PEAS,” and “HANDSOME,” to     the same; lines 2 and 8 also match. The first
                   mention a few.                                 two lines become the last two lines. Got it?

                                                                  Code: abaaabab. EXAMPLE: “CAPTURED”
                70  RHYTHM: Arrangement, flow, measured
                   motion, regular beat of words, meter—       76  VILLANELLE: Written in iambic pentameter

                   learning to move to the groove.                (   /    /    /    /    ), a French form,
                                                                               ´
                                                                          ´
                                                                     ´
                                                                                        ´
                                                                                    ´
                                                                  usually five stanzas of three lines each with a
                71  SONNET: (Was I channeling some 13th century   final stanza of four lines. There are two
                   Italian poet?) The code for this is abbaabba,   strong repeating lines. To see the pattern of
                   cdecde, or cdcdcd. There is an octave          how this puzzle fits together look at “Fever.”
                   (8 lines) and a sestet (6 lines). In the octave   If you get two good repeating lines and two
                   there are two envelope rhymes (that’s the bb   sets of words that have lots of rhymes, you
                   part) tucked into the middles. For a           can do this! EXAMPLE: “FEVER”
                   Shakespearean sonnet, the code is this: abab,
                   cdcd, efef, gg. Both are 14 lines of iambic
                   pentameter. EXAMPLE: “CONDUCTOR” is an

                   Italian sonnet—abbaabba cdcdcd.



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