The difference between poetry and poetry

The difference between poetry and poetry is as follows:

The difference between the two is the pronunciation. The pronunciation of poem is British [?pm], American [?po?m], and poetry is pronounced. British [?pt], American [?po?t]. The two have different meanings. Poem means poetry; rhyme; poet means poet. The morphological changes of the two are different. The plural form of poetry is poems, and the plural form of poetry is poets.

The usage of the two is different. The basic meaning of poem is "poem, poetry", which refers to "poems" one by one, not the style of poetry. Poetry is a countable noun, and "a poem" can be said to be a poem.

The basic meaning of poetry is "poet", which refers to a person who writes poetry or rhymes. It can also refer to a "female poet". By extension, it can refer to "a person who is good at feeling or expressing". Poet is mostly used to express a positive tone without a derogatory connotation.

Example sentences are as follows:

1. Each?child?had?to?recite?a?poem?to?the?class. Every child has to recite a song in the class poetry. The students debated the aesthetic of the poems.

2. He?recited?the?whole?poem?in?one?breath. He recited the entire poem in one breath. The poem recalls Eliot's 'The Waste Land'. This poem is reminiscent of Eliot's The Waste Land.