Check out the COMMENTS for entries this week, and come back throughout the week to see more links to poems as they come in.
Drop by on Wednesday for the Décima Poetry Challenge. Sometimes the two challenges have similar themes you can unite over the week.
Click HERE. To learn about the new style I’ve created called Shi Rensa Haiku and how to write one, maybe even for the challenges.
An updated How to Write Haiku in English. that has just a little more detail and for knowledge and perhaps craft. And how to do a Pingback.
Useful Links.
Thesaurus: LAUGH, We
Thesaurus.com
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
The Guidelines:
- Take the two words and write a Haiku. I use Haiku in English (the link shows you how) as my style, which is 5 syllables for the first line, 7 for the second, and 5 for the third, but you can use what you like.
- The link above has links on how to write Haibun and Tanka. You can also do the 3/5/3 form if you like instead of the 5/7/5 that I usually use. Write, share, and have fun. For syllable help,
- For syllables for each word, and different definitions, you use the definition that works for you Haiku. You can also use SYNONYMS. Go to Thesaurus.com for synonym help.
- Copy the link of your finished haiku URL and paste in a comment below so we can all go and visit your Haiku.
- You can do a pingback. What’s a pingback? Place the URL from the address bar up top from this post as a link within your post. Your inclusion of the link encourages others to try the challenge, be creative, and join a community to find friends and more followers (hopefully). I honestly gain nothing with more people visiting the post. I don’t have ads running that generates revenue by your visit or by clicks on whatever WordPress has put up.
- Click HERE for a detailed post on PINGBACKS.
- If you like, copy the image in this post and place it within their post, just to show the Haiku is part of this challenge.
- I am not saying you need or even should, but if you would like to do so then go ahead.
[…] Written for Ronovan Writes #Weekly #Haiku #Poetry Prompt #Challenge 365 LAUGH and We. […]
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[…] Ronovan gives us the words laugh and we for our Haiku challenge today. […]
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Do Not Hesitate
We who will laugh last
are clearly vaccine aware:
beware laughing first.
http://www.engleson.ca
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Do Not Hesitate-A Shi Rensa
We who will laugh last
are clearly vaccine aware:
beware laughing first.
Beware laughing first,
for laughter minus real facts
wears a body out.
Wears a body out,
frays the soul’s pandemic eye,
in the viral storm.
In the viral storm,
do not hesitate, my loves:
vaccinate in time.
http://www.engleson.ca
LikeLiked by 1 person
[…] https://ronovanwrites.com/2021/07/05/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge-365-laugh-a… […]
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[…] https://ronovanwrites.com/2021/07/05/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge-365-laugh-a… […]
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[…] in collabortion with Ronovanwites word prompt and the italki Anniversary […]
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[…] for FOWC: Repeat and also inspired by the FFFC #125 picture (below). I also used the words for Ronovan Writes’ haiku challenge, even though I wrote a Lune rather than a haiku, so am linking to that. […]
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[…] for…Thursday inspiration by new epic author – freeRonovan Writes Haiku challenge – laugh and […]
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Here’s mine. Thank you for the haiku challenge
https://mindfills.wordpress.com/2021/07/06/zephyrs-a-haiku/
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[…] https://ronovanwrites.com/2021/07/05/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge-365-laugh-a… […]
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https://wp.me/p4ayEo-4Oe short link in case the pingback doesn’t work
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[…] This is part of Ronovanwrite’s Weekly Haiku Challenge. […]
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[…] https://ronovanwrites.com/2021/07/05/ronovan-writes-weekly-haiku-poetry-prompt-challenge-365-laugh-a… […]
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