PinkBadger—iStock/Thinkstock Poetry is a precise art. A great poem is made up of components that fit together so well that the result seems impossible to imagine any other way. But how to describe those meticulously chosen components? With highly specialized terminology, of course. Thanks to centuries of effort by scholars, you too can identify the most-nuanced part of a poem with a single word (or two)! Epizeuxis (\epə'züksəs\) Hark, hark! Words, words, words. Never, never, never, never, never! Epizeuxis is a term that describes the repetition of a word for emphasis. (William Shakespeare was a particular master.)