This Grade 4 Medium 1 worksheet pushes poetry skills further by sorting stanza, verse, and line, then naming sound devices in short example phrases. Students complete nine fill-in items and a four-pair matching activity that links terms to clear examples. The why notes explain each match, helping Grade 4 learners build precise vocabulary for describing poems and preparing them well for upcoming analysis tasks.

Style:
Busy Bee
Poetry Elements
Grade 4
★ Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) A group of lines forming one section of a poem is best called a stanza.
2) The word verse can mean one stanza of a poem or one single line.
3) The line Bees buzzed busily by the bright blossoms uses alliteration.
4) The word splash copying water sound is an example of onomatopoeia.
5) Repeating the line Run, run, run for emphasis is called repetition.
6) A poem made of two four-line stanzas has a total of eight lines.
7) When cat and hat appear at the ends of two lines, this creates rhyme.
8) Drama is meant to be performed, while a poem is mainly meant to be read.
9) Prose is written in paragraphs, but poetry is written in lines.
★ Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1) Match each item to its correct answer.
Alliteration
Silly snakes slither slowly
Group of lines together
Onomatopoeia
Buzz copying a real sound
Cat and hat ending alike
Rhyme
Cat and hat ending alike
Buzz copying a real sound
Stanza
Group of lines together
Silly snakes slither slowly
🎯

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Complete each section carefully.

10 Questions
10-15 minutes
Auto-graded
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