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The word "diamante" is a variation of the word "diamond". A diamante poem is shaped like a diamond.
A diamond-shaped poem is called a "diamond poem" or a "diamond shaped poem."
Certainly! Here's an example of a white space poem: crimson leaves dance in the wind whispering secrets
In lines 2 and 5 of a diamante poem, two adjectives describe each contrasting idea. For example, in a diamante comparing day and night, the second and fifth lines would each have two adjectives describing day and night, respectively.
The diamante poem originated in Japan in the 1960s. It is a form of poetry that has a diamond shape when written out and typically follows a specific pattern of words that transition from one topic to another.
i dun no...maybe get the idea like the lady of shalott
A full poem is the one in which the emotion prevalent and predominant in that poem is fully expressed. An example is Shelley's Ode to the West Wind, To A Skylark and The Cloud. The full poem means not an abstract, but the entire poem.
Wind's Poem was created in 2009.
An antonym diamante poem is a poem written in the diamond shape format that contrasts two opposite concepts or words in each line. The poem typically starts with the first concept or word at the top, transitions in the middle to the opposite concept or word, and then concludes with the first concept or word at the bottom.
The tree's branches swayed in the wind like a ballet dancer.
diamante
Fire Bright, Warm Glowing, Heating, Burning Hot As The Sun Shining, Blazing, Lightening Red, Vivid Blaze