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Rimed two strophes
Rimed two strophes






rimed two strophes
  1. #RIMED TWO STROPHES FULL#
  2. #RIMED TWO STROPHES SERIES#

Of or like DIPODY, a double foot in prosody. (a line) consisting chiefly or wholly of, dactyls > DACTYLICS.Ī verse line or a verb having ten syllables.Ī group of ten (musicians, lines of verse). Rhyme a game in which one player gives a word to which another finds a rhyme rhyme.Ī cycle of myths, poems, songs, etc > CYCLUSES (not CYCLI*).Ī metrical foot of one short syllable followed by two long syllables. The theory or practice of concrete poetry.

rimed two strophes

One who composes CENTOS, poems manufactured by putting together passages of other poems.Īn unnecessary word added to round off a sentence or complete a line of verse.Ī variety of iambic trimeter.Ī verse having an iambus in the fifth place, and a spondee in the sixth or last.Ī metrical foot comprising a trochee and an iambus > CHORIAMBS, CHORIAMBI.Ī group of five, especially a five-line stanza.Ī light verse quatrain rhyming aabb and usually dealing with a person named in the initial rhyme.Ī fragment of a few words or feet in ancient prosody > COMMAS or COMMATA.

rimed two strophes

(a line) lacking one syllable in the last foot.Ī literary work, especially a poem, composed of parts taken from works of other authors > CENTOS or CENTONES. The condition of being CATALECTIC > CATALEXES.

#RIMED TWO STROPHES SERIES#

Relating to a CAESURA, a pause in a poem or a song.Ĭrab-wise (of verses, etc) reading both ways, palindromic.Ī principal division of a long poem > CANTOS.Ī Provençal or Italian form of lyric poetry, consisting of a series of stanzas without a refrain > CANZONES or CANZONI. The bob (short line near the end of a stanza) with the lines following it.Ī pause in a poem or a song > CAESURAE or CAESURAS, CESURAE or CESURAS. To mention in rhyme or verse to rhyme about. One of the ancient Celtic order of formal poets and singers also an armour for a horse (verb) to armour a horse > BARDS, BARDING, BARDED. Relating to the BACCHIUS, a type of metrical foot.Ī metrical foot composed of a short syllable and two long ones according to some, two long and a short > BACCHII. Not connected, consisting of parts having different rhythms (noun) a verse of such a kind.Ī song or poem greeting the dawn or about lovers parting at dawn. Vowel-rhyme, coincidence of vowel sound without regard to consonants. The accented or longer part of a poetic foot the point where an ictus is put > ARSES.Ī choriambic verse, first used by the Greek poet Asclepias, consisting of four feet, viz. Relating to an ANTISPAST, a foot composed of an iambus and a trochee. Of, relating to, or characterized by opposition to traditional poetic technique or style.Ī metrical foot comprising an iambus followed by a trochee > ANTISPASTS. In the form of an ANAPAEST, two short metrical syllables followed by one long one.Ī foot of two long (or stressed) syllables followed by a short (or unstressed) one > ANTIBACCHII. Two short metrical syllables followed by one long one. One or more short syllables introductory to the normal rhythm of a line > ANACRUSES. Of or like an AMPHIBRACH, a foot of three syllables, the middle one long, the first and last short.Ī nonsensical piece of writing, usually in verse form, typically composed as a parody.Ī foot of three syllables, the middle one short and the others long, as in cast/tas. Pertaining to, or characterized by, acrostics > ACROSTICALLY.Ī pastoral poem, often in the form of a dialogue between shepherds.Ī verse form consisting of strophes with four tetrametric lines, attributed to Alcaeus, a lyric poet of Mitylene, about 600 BC.Īlternately answering, responsive, as often in pastoral poetry.Ī foot of three syllables, the middle one long, the first and last short. Lacking a head or a leader lacking the first syllable or foot (of a hexameter).Ī composition, usually in verse, in which the first or the last letters of the lines, or certain other letters, taken in order, form a name, word, phrase, or motto.

#RIMED TWO STROPHES FULL#

Having a complete or full number of syllables in a poetic line. New words, if any, and new inflections of existing words, are shown in red.








Rimed two strophes