you need to be more specific.....
Umm which poem? Can you please write out the poem in the comments so we can see?
Examples of onomatopoeia in "Esperanza Rising" include "thump" and "clink" when describing sound effects in the story. These words mimic the actual sounds they represent, adding vividness to the storytelling.
No, there is no onomatopoeia in this poem.
a
pome with sound effects
Yes! If you read the poem, can you recognize it? If you know what onomatopoeia is, it should be apparent, even from the first line: "Wind in the poplars and a broken branch..." With even that first line, you can hear the violent rushing of the wind and the popping and breaking of branches.
Onomatopoeia is not a form of poetry, it is a literary device. Onomatopoeia is the name for the use of words to represent specific sounds, such as "Vrroom" for a car revving, or "Bang!" for a gunshot.
no, onomatopoeia is words like BOOM, buzz, Bam and etc
Yes, there are many examples of onomatopoeia in Whitman's poem "Song of Myself." One such example is in the last section, "I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world." The word "yawp" is an example of onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia is a word that sounds like the noise it signifies ie. bang has the the same effect as the sound (loud and harsh).Onomatopoeia can be anywhere in a poem but they are verbs- the sausages sizzledbang went the gun, the mud squelched
Alliteration and/or onomatopoeia contribute to the effective reading of a poem.
It had both :)