A short composition, usually in verse, that expresses ideas, emotions, or storytelling in a concentrated, often rhythmic form. As a noun, it refers to a single piece of verse or a collection of lines arranged for imagery, sound, and meaning. The term emphasizes craft, theme, and cadence more than length or prose style.
"I read a moving poem at the poetry recital."
"She wrote a love poem to celebrate their anniversary."
"The poem's imagery conjures a wintry landscape with quiet, precise detail."
"Teachers often share a favorite poem to illustrate meter and rhythm."
Poem comes from the Latin poēma, meaning 'something made' or 'a piece of verse', from Greek poēma 'a thing made, a poem'. The root poi-/poiēsis denotes making or creating, linked to poieō ‘I make’. The early Latin adoption signified a measured composition or verse. In English, poem was used by the 16th century to describe a work of verse, gradually broadening to denote any composition arranged in rhythm and lines. The sense evolved through Renaissance and neoclassical periods as poets experimented with form (sonnets, odes, epics), while the term steadily carried a focus on craft and expressive language. By the 19th and 20th centuries, poem had become a standard noun for short, lyric pieces versus lengthy epic works, and today it encompasses diverse forms across genres and languages.
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Poem" and can often be used interchangeably.
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Words that rhyme with "Poem"
-oam sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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Pronounce as po-EM with the primary stress on the second syllable: US /poʊˈɛm/, UK /ˈpəʊ.ɛm/, AU /ˈpəʊ.ɛm/. Start with a rounded /oʊ/ in the first syllable and glide into the closed /ɛm/ vowel; the second syllable carries the stronger emphasis. Tip: end with a light, quick /m/ to keep it crisp.
Most speakers misplace stress on the first syllable (po-EM vs PO-em). Another error is pronouncing a long /oʊ/ through the second syllable or adding extra vowel sounds (poh-EE-um). Focus on stressing the second syllable and keeping /ɛm/ short and clipped, not dragging the vowel. Practice with minimal pairs like 'poem' vs 'poem‑like' to hear the stressed second syllable clearly.
In US English, the second syllable is clearly stressed: po-EM with /poʊˈɛm/. UK speakers may have a tighter vowel in the first syllable and sometimes a slightly reduced second vowel, but typically /ˈpəʊ.ɛm/. Australian English aligns with non-rhotic tendencies; /poʊˈɛm/ or /ˈpəʊ.ɛm/ with a concise /t/ or /d/ not involved. Overall, stress moves to the second syllable across accents, but vowel quality and rhythm vary subtly.
The challenge is the shift of stress from the first to the second syllable, creating a need to pre-tune your mouth for /poʊ/ before quickly switching to /ˈɛm/. Additionally, the /o/ in the first syllable is a mid-to-close vowel that can drift into /ə/ or /oʊ/ mispronunciations, and the final /m/ must be light and prevent nasal leakage. Focused practice on moving from /poʊ/ to /ɛm/ with crisp, short /m/ helps clarity.
Poem features secondary concern—some speakers produce a stronger, though not always pronounced, secondary stress on the first syllable in rhythm-heavy contexts, while most dialects assign primary stress to the second syllable. Practically, you’ll hear and say po-EM consistently, but be aware of poetry contexts that gloss over the first syllable slightly when reciting with a certain cadence. The core is clear secondary vs primary stress distinction.
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