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Google Poetics Autocomplete Poetry Quiz: Test Your Search Poem Skills

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I built this Google Poetics Autocomplete Poetry Quiz after testing seeds on my own phone in the kitchen line. If you want to learn how to make a Google Autocomplete poem on your phone, this walks you through simple seeds like “I wish I” and “Sometimes I,” quick 5-7-5 haiku structure, and easy craft tips for imagery and rhythm. I also show why clearing search history can reduce bias in suggestions, so your Autocomplete poetry feels fresh. Whether you are brand new or already playing with Google Poetics, you will pick up practical steps, real examples, and a fun tie breaker you can try right now.

Google Poetics Trivia Quiz

How to play: 3 rounds, 15 questions total. Mostly multiple choice, plus a creative tie-breaker. Give 1 point per correct answer.

  • 1 of 15

    In Google Poetics, a "seed" is:

    • The first noun in your poem
    • The opening words you type to trigger suggestions
    • The last line of a haiku
    • A hidden ranking factor
  • 2 of 15

    On your phone, the simplest way to keep building a line from Autocomplete is to:

    • Tap the first suggestion repeatedly
    • Press Enter after every word
    • Turn on airplane mode
    • Paste the line into Notes
  • 3 of 15

    Why do many creators use seeds like "I wish I" or "Sometimes I" when starting?

    • They force brand names
    • They invite narrative, emotion, and verbs
    • They guarantee rhyme
    • They block ads
  • 4 of 15

    Clearing or pausing search history before writing an Autocomplete poem can help because:

    • It speeds up your phone
    • It reduces personal bias in suggestions
    • It makes suggestions rhyme
    • It enables dark mode
  • 5 of 15

    Which seed is most likely to produce a lyrical list you can shape into a poem?

    • "Buy cheapest"
    • "www."
    • "Define"
    • "I remember"
  • 6 of 15

    "I run toward tomorrow, tomorrow runs from me." This shows:

    • Personification
    • Onomatopoeia
    • Synecdoche
    • Caesura
  • 7 of 15

    Which example shows anaphora, repetition at the start of lines?

    • "never, never, never"
    • "I want to sing, I want to sleep, I want to stay"
    • "soft summer sky"
    • "storm, silence, stars"
  • 8 of 15

    A classic haiku shape is helpful for Autocomplete poems because it gives quick structure. What is the 3-line syllable pattern?

    • 4-6-4
    • 5-7-5
    • 6-8-6
    • 7-5-7
  • 9 of 15

    When a thought runs past a line break into the next line, that is called:

    • Enjambment
    • End-rhyme
    • Meter
    • Volta
  • 10 of 15

    You get three suggestions for the next word. Which choice most clearly creates imagery? Seed line: "Sometimes I carry"

    • "on"
    • "a bag"
    • "the quiet smell of rain"
    • "stuff"
  • 11 of 15

    Start: "I wish I could find"

    • "the road that remembers us"
    • "settings, battery saver"
    • "cheap coupons online"
    • "PDF download now"
  • 12 of 15

    Start: "Sometimes I type light"

    • "and the screen answers softly"
    • "weather tomorrow please"
    • "news, sports, stocks, flights"
    • "serial numbers list"
  • 13 of 15

    Start: "You ask me for truth"

    • "I search and the sea answers"
    • "terms and conditions"
    • "calculator open"
    • "clear cache and cookies"
  • 14 of 15

    Start: "Teach me how to stay"

    • "until morning forgives me"
    • "nearest hotel deals"
    • "map route fastest"
    • "open app store"
  • 15 of 15

    Start: "Phone light in my hands"

    • "a small moon I keep and lose"
    • "best prices today"
    • "download ringtone mp3"
    • "contact support now"
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