Need another word that means the same as “poem”? Find 6 synonyms and 30 related words for “poem” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Poem” are: verse form, verse, song, rhyme, piece of poetry, verse composition
Poem as a Noun
Definitions of "Poem" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “poem” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A piece of writing in which the expression of feelings and ideas is given intensity by particular attention to diction (sometimes involving rhyme), rhythm, and imagery.
- A composition written in metrical feet forming rhythmical lines.
Synonyms of "Poem" as a noun (6 Words)
piece of poetry | A serving that has been cut from a larger portion. |
rhyme | Correspondence in the sounds of two or more lines (especially final sounds. Harriet sang Ben little rhymes. |
song | A musical composition suggestive of a song. A pop song. |
verse | A versicle. We were each required to recite a Bible verse from memory. |
verse composition | A line of metrical text. |
verse form | A line of metrical text. |
Usage Examples of "Poem" as a noun
- The sun is an important symbol in this poem.
- Lyric poems.
- A poem in terza rima.
Associations of "Poem" (30 Words)
anthology | A collection of songs or musical compositions issued in one album. An anthology of European poetry. |
antiphon | A musical setting of an antiphon. |
aphorism | A pithy observation which contains a general truth. The debate begins and ends at the level of aphorism with commentators saying that something must be done. |
assonant | Having the same sound (especially the same vowel sound) occurring in successive stressed syllables. Note the assonant words and syllables in tilting at windmills. |
bard | Shakespeare. Our national bard Robert Burns. |
cadence | Rhythm. The final cadences of the Prelude. |
canto | The highest part (usually the melody) in a piece of choral music. Dante s Divine Comedy has 100 cantos. |
couplet | A pair of successive lines of verse, typically rhyming and of the same length. |
doggerel | Comic verse composed in irregular rhythm. Doggerel verses. |
epic | Constituting or having to do with or suggestive of a literary epic. A Hollywood biblical epic. |
epigram | A pithy saying or remark expressing an idea in a clever and amusing way. A Wildean epigram. |
fiction | A deliberately false or improbable account. The notion of the country being a democracy is a polite fiction. |
literature | The humanistic study of a body of literature. Her place in literature is secure. |
lyric | Write lyrics for a song. A lyric soprano with a light clear timbre. |
minstrel | A performer in a minstrel show. They listened to the minstrels singing songs of knightly prowess. |
missive | A letter, especially a long or official one. Yet another missive from the Foreign Office. |
ode | A lyric poem with complex stanza forms. |
poesy | Literature in metrical form. The genius of poesy. |
poetic | Written in verse rather than prose. A poetic drama. |
poetry | Something regarded as comparable to poetry in its beauty. The music department is housed in a building which is pure poetry. |
prose | Compose in or convert into prose. Closely typed in best office prose. |
quatrain | A stanza of four lines. |
rhapsody | (in ancient Greece) an epic poem adapted for recitation. Rhapsodies of praise. |
rhyme | Compose rhymes. The clues were written in rhyme. |
sentence | Pronounce a sentence on somebody in a court of law. Ten army officers were sentenced to life imprisonment. |
sonnet | Praise in a sonnet. He sonneted his hostess now. |
stanza | A group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem; a verse. |
syllable | A character or characters representing a syllable. The word pocket has two syllables. |
verse | Compose verses or put into verse. The second verse. |
writer | A device that writes data to a storage medium. A writer of short stories. |