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What is the noun for poetize?

What's the noun for poetize? Here's the word you're looking for.

poetry
  1. The class of literature comprising poems.
  2. Composition in verse or language exhibiting conscious attention to patterns.
  3. A poet's literary production
  4. A 'poetical' quality, artistic and/or artfull, which appeals or stirs the imagination, in any medium
  5. Synonyms:
  6. Examples:
    1. “The poetry and literature were often a mirror of how the king and the aristocracy who surrounded him liked to think of themselves.”
      “Okigbo composed a poetry that skillfully blended European and African narrative themes and forms.”
      “He's a highly educated public speaker, adept at using tricks and poetry in his speech.”
poem
  1. A literary piece written in verse.
  2. A piece of writing in the tradition of poetry, an instance of poetry.
  3. A piece of poetic writing, that is with an intensity or depth of expression or inspiration greater than is usual in prose.
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “This poem and many others have been reprinted in anthologies and journals worldwide.”
      “In an absurdist prose poem he wrote at the time, renewal is associated with class-based oppression.”
      “As these images warred in my mind, my thoughts just started flowing, and a poem formed.”
poeticism
  1. (uncountable) Poetic style; lyricism.
  2. (countable) A poetic phrase, utterance, etc.
  3. Examples:
    1. “Donahue, the band's intense principal songwriter and guitarist, displays a poeticism not just confined to his lyrics.”
      “I like to think of sexiness, poeticism and singing as one big swoop of life all rolled into one.”
      “It should bring audiences good entertainment as well as a dream and poeticism.”
poetics
  1. (philosophy) The theory of poetry, or of literature in general
  2. Examples:
    1. “They cover logic, ethics, metaphysics, physics, zoology, politics, rhetoric, and poetics.”
      “Such an explanation, of course, fails to take into account Byron's serious disagreements with Wordsworth's poetics and politics.”
      “A history of twentieth-century American poetry is a history of women making and remaking poetics as a gendered space.”
poetastry
  1. The works of a poetaster; inferior poetry.
poetling
  1. A young, immature, inexperienced, petty, or insignificant poet.
poetress
  1. (obsolete) A female poet; a poetess.
poetization
  1. The act or process of making something poetic.
poeticalness
  1. The state or quality of being poetical.
  2. Examples:
    1. “It was the time when ornateness of figure and poeticalness of diction were regarded as essentials of style.”
      “It also contains his polemic with the avant-garde cult of metaphors as well as with postromantic poeticalness and easy melodiousness.”
      “The belief that the poeticalness of poetry is just that relationship between sound and sense is widespread in the teaching of English and other modern languages.”
poetette
  1. (rare) A young or insignificant poet, usually female.
poeticule
  1. A poetaster; a bad poet.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “He does not allow the voice of the pessimist spirit to prevail, as a poeticule of the morbid school would have done.”
      “It can only be supposed that Swinburne needed a poeticule to torture.”
poeticness
  1. The state or quality of being poetic.
poet
  1. A person who writes poems.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “I read them with great pleasure but with little or no thought for the agony that the poet has gone through.”
      “El Greco was like a writer, sometimes a poet and sometimes a versifier, who had little command of syntax.”
      “As discussed above, the city is the quintessential home of Auster's version of the post-modern poet.”
poetaster
  1. An unskilled poet.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Or is he a poetaster whose taste is overridden by the dream of a talent he has never possessed?”
      “Besides, I hope to taste some of the pie, and a pie-taster should not be a poetaster.”
      “Isaac Hawkins Browne was a poetaster of some little celebrity in the last century.”
poetastery
  1. Inferior poetry.
  2. Examples:
    1. “As Poetry is totally distinct from Poetastery, so is Criticism not to be confounded with Criticastricism.”
poeticization
  1. The act or process of making poetic.
poetizer
poetiser
  1. Alternative form of poetizer
poetasting
  1. The writing of inferior poetry.
poetship
  1. The state or character of a poet.
poeticks
  1. Obsolete form of poetics.
poetess
  1. (dated) A female poet.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “It was a pathetic love story of the romanticist poetess Elizabeth Barrett and novice poet Robert Browning.”
      “We use author and poet rather than authoress and poetess, but until fairly recently it was permissible to distinguish persons who act by gender.”
      “He treasures Parveen's poetical works inscribed by the poetess herself to Aitzaz Ahsan.”
poethood
  1. The property of being a poet.
poemet
  1. A short poem.
poetese
  1. The language used by poets.
poemette
  1. A short poem.
poeme
  1. Obsolete spelling of poem
poete
  1. Obsolete spelling of poet
poeticizations
  1. plural of poeticization
poetasteries
  1. plural of poetastery
poeticisms
  1. plural of poeticism
poetasters
poeticules
poemettes
  1. plural of poemette
poetlings
  1. plural of poetling
poetettes
  1. plural of poetette
poetisers
  1. plural of poetiser
poetizers
  1. plural of poetizer
poetships
  1. plural of poetship
poetresses
  1. plural of poetress
poetesses
poemets
  1. plural of poemet
poetries
  1. plural of poetry
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “After watching three of four of these poetries in motion glide past the cafe, I ask the patronne if these trains are really such a big deal.”
poemes
  1. plural of poeme
poetes
  1. plural of poete
poets
  1. plural of poet
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The seminar room has wallcharts of poets, artists, historical and scientific discoveries.”
      “Bly is a native Minnesotan and the roster of Minnesota poets of any accomplishment is not long.”
      “The translation was made by an array of the most able scholars and poets of the time.”
poems
  1. plural of poem
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Sometimes the readers do feel shocked and startled by the abrupt and terse nature of some of these poems, but the effect is rewarding.”
      “Journeys, wanderings, separations, and a sense of homelessness are elements of many of the poems.”
      “He was sent two poems from a Miss Ethel Malley, who wrote saying they were found among her brother's possessions after his death.”
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