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After you have classified verses based on the word with which they end and on the number of poetic syllables they contain, the next step is to determine the rhyme. Most of the poems in Aproximaciones do represent patterns of rhyme, although rhyme in a poem is optional and is often omitted, especially in more contemporary poems. When it does appear, poetic rhyme is either consonant or assonant.
Task 1. Read and Define. The authors present a definition of rhyme in the second paragraph of this section, on page 129 of the text. Read the paragraph and then answer the following questions.
Task 2. Guess.
Task 3. Paraphrase and Compare. In the next two paragraphs, on page 130 of the text, the authors define the two major types of rhyme. Read and paraphrase the definitions.
Task 4. Fill in the Blanks. Within the definition of rima consonante in the text, the authors provide other important information about representing rhyme. Fill in the missing information in this quote from page 130 of the text and make sure that you understand what it means.
Task 5. Explain.
Task 6. Scan for Information.
Study Hint: Determining the Rhyme of a Poem
Step 1. Identify the last word in each line (aguda, llana, esdrújula, sobresdrújula).
Step 2. Identify the tonic vowel/syllable in the last word in each line (last, second-to-last, third-to-last).
Step 3. Establish the pattern of sounds. If a pattern of vowels is repeated, the rhyme is assonant. If a pattern of a vowel plus consonant is repeated, the rhyme is consonant.
Examples:
Task 7. Practice with Rhyme.