| acatalectic | having a complete or full number of syllables in a poetic line. |
| acephalous | lacking a head or a leader; lacking the first syllable or foot (of a hexameter). |
| acrostic | a 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. |
| acrostical | pertaining to, or characterized by, acrostics > ACROSTICALLY. |
| aeglogue eclogue | a pastoral poem, often in the form of a dialogue between shepherds. |
| alcaic | a verse form consisting of strophes with four tetrametric lines, attributed to Alcaeus, a lyric poet of Mitylene, about 600 BC. |
| alexandrine | a French verse form. |
| amoebean | alternately answering, responsive, as often in pastoral poetry. |
| amphibrach | a foot of three syllables, the middle one long, the first and last short. |
| amphibrachic | of or like an AMPHIBRACH, a foot of three syllables, the middle one long, the first and last short. |
| amphigoric | relating to AMPHIGORY. |
| amphigory amphigouri | a nonsensical piece of writing, usually in verse form, typically composed as a parody. [Fr. amphigouri]. |
| amphimacer | a foot of three syllables, the middle one short and the others long, as in cast/tas. |
| anacrusis | one or more short syllables introductory to the normal rhythm of a line > ANACRUSES. |
| anapaest anapest | two short metrical syllables followed by one long one. [Gk. anapaistos struck back, from ana back, and paiein to strike]. |
| anapaestic anapestic | in the form of an ANAPAEST, two short metrical syllables followed by one long one. |
| antibacchius | a foot of two long (or stressed) syllables followed by a short (or unstressed) one > ANTIBACCHII. |
| antipoetic | of, relating to, or characterized by opposition to traditional poetic technique or style. |
| antispast | a metrical foot comprising an iambus followed by a trochee > ANTISPASTS. [Gk. antispastos, from antispaein, to draw back]. |
| antispastic | relating to an ANTISPAST, a foot composed of an iambus and a trochee. |
| arsis | the accented or longer part of a poetic foot; the point where an ictus is put > ARSES. |
| asclepiad | a choriambic verse, first used by the Greek poet Asclepias, consisting of four feet, viz. a spondee, two choriambi, and an iambus. |
| assonance | vowel-rhyme, coincidence of vowel sound without regard to consonants. |
| asynartete | not connected, consisting of parts having different rhythms; (noun) a verse of such a kind. |
| aubade | a song or poem greeting the dawn or about lovers parting at dawn. |
| awdl | a Welsh ode. |
| bacchiac | relating to the BACCHIUS, a type of metrical foot. |
| bacchius | a metrical foot composed of a short syllable and two long ones; according to some, two long and a short > BACCHII. |
| ballade | a poetic form, originally for singing. |
| balladist | one who composes ballads. |
| balladmonger | a dealer in or composer of ballads. |
| balladry | ballads collectively. |
| bard | 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. |
| bardic | pertaining to a bard. |
| bardism | the state of a being a BARD. |
| bardling | an inferior bard. |
| bardship | the state of being a bard. |
| berhyme | to mention in rhyme or verse; to rhyme about. |
| bobwheel | the bob (short line near the end of a stanza) with the lines following it. |
| caesura cesura | a pause in a poem or a song > CAESURAE or CAESURAS, CESURAE or CESURAS. |
| caesural cesural | of or pertaining to a CAESURA. Also CESURAL. |
| caesuric | relating to a CAESURA, a pause in a poem or a song. |
| cancionero | a collection of songs and poems. |
| cancrine | crab-wise; (of verses, etc) reading both ways, palindromic. |
| canto | a principal division of a long poem > CANTOS. |
| canzone | a Provençal or Italian form of lyric poetry, consisting of a series of stanzas without a refrain > CANZONES or CANZONI. |
| catalexis | the condition of being CATALECTIC > CATALEXES. |
| catalectic | (a line) lacking one syllable in the last foot. |
| cento | a literary work, especially a poem, composed of parts taken from works of other authors > CENTOS or CENTONES. [L. cento, patchwork]. |
| centoist centonist | one who composes CENTOS, poems manufactured by putting together passages of other poems. |
| cesura | see CAESURA. |
| cesural | see CAESURAL. |
| cheville | an unnecessary word added to round off a sentence or complete a line of verse. |
| choliamb | a variety of iambic trimeter. [Gk. choliambos, from cholos, lame + iambos, iambus]. |
| choliambic | a verse having an iambus in the fifth place, and a spondee in the sixth or last. |
| choree | a TROCHEE. |
| choreic | relating to a CHOREE, a trochee. |
| choreus | a trochee, a choree > CHOREUSES. |
| choriamb choriambus | a metrical foot comprising a trochee and an iambus > CHORIAMBS, CHORIAMBI. [Gk. choriambos, from choreios, a trochee + iambos, iambus]. |
| choriambic | pertaining to a choriamb. |
| cinquain | a group of five, especially a five-line stanza. |
| clerihew | a light verse quatrain rhyming aabb and usually dealing with a person named in the initial rhyme. |
| colubriad | (Cowper) the epic of a snake. |
| comma | a fragment of a few words or feet in ancient prosody > COMMAS or COMMATA. |
| concretism | the theory or practice of concrete poetry. |
| couplet | a pair of rhyming lines. |
| crambo | rhyme; a game in which one player gives a word to which another finds a rhyme; rhyme. |
| cramboclink | rhyming doggerel. |
| cretic | a type of metrical foot. |
| cyclus | a cycle of myths, poems, songs, etc > CYCLUSES (not CYCLI*). |
| cynghanedd | a technique in Welsh verse. |
| dactyl | a metrical foot of one short syllable followed by two long syllables. [Gk. daktylos, a finger]. |
| dactylar | pertaining to a DACTYL; dactylic. |
| dactylic | (a line) consisting chiefly or wholly of, dactyls > DACTYLICS. |
| dactylist | a writer of dactylic verse. |
| decastich | a ten-line poem. |
| decasyllable | a verse line or a verb having ten syllables. |
| decasyllabic | (a line of verse) having ten syllables. |
| dectet | a group of ten (musicians, lines of verse). |
| dimeter | a verse of two measures. |
| dipodic | of or like DIPODY, a double foot in prosody. |
| dipody | two metrical feet taken together, or included in one measure. |
| dispondee | a double spondee; a foot consisting of four long syllables. |
| distich | a couple of verses or poetic lines making complete sense. [Gk. distichos, from di-, twice + stichos, a line]. |
| distichal | of or like a DISTICH, a couple of verses or poetic lines making complete sense. |
| dithyramb | a hymn or poem to honor Bacchus. |
| dithyrambic | like a DITHYRAMB. |
| ditrochee | a double trochee; a foot made up of two trochees. |
| dit ditt | a poem, the words of a song. |
| divan | a collection of poems in Persian or Arabic, usually by a single author. |
| dizain | a ten-line stanza or poem. |
| dochmiac | pertaining to, or containing, the DOCHMIUS, a foot of five syllables. |
| dochmius | a foot of five syllables, typically with first and fourth short, the rest long > DOCHMIUSES or DOCHMII. |
| doggerel doggrel | poor quality comic verse. |
| dolichurus | a dactylic hexameter with a redundant syllable at the end > DOLICHURI. |
| duan | a division of a poem corresponding to a canto; a poem or song. |
| eclogue | see AEGLOGUE. |
| elegiac | a verse line of five dactyls with a marked caesura > ELEGIACS. |
| elegiacal | related to ELEGY > ELEGIACALLY. |
| elegiast elegist | one who composes elegies. |
| elegise elegize | to write an elegy. Also ELEGIZE. |
| elegy | a mournful poem for one who is dead. |
| enjamb | in verse, to make an ENJAMBEMENT. |
| enjambement enjambment | the continuation of a sentence from one line of a couplet to the next. |
| envoi | the concluding part of a poem or book. |
| epic | a long narrative poem. |
| epical | epic > EPICALLY. |
| epicede | a funeral ode. |
| epicedial epicedian | of or relating to dirges or elegies. |
| epicedium | a funeral ode, an epicede > EPICEDIA. |
| epicism | the writing of epics. |
| epicist | one who writes epics. |
| epiclike | like an epic. |
| epigram | a short, witty poem; a concise, clever and often paradoxical statement. |
| epinicion epinikion | an ode in honour of a victor or winner. |
| epithalamion epithalamium | a poem or song in honor of a bride and bridegroom > EPITHALAMIA, EPITHALAMIUMS. |
| epitrite | a metrical foot consisting of three long syllables and one short syllable. |
| epode | a genre of lyric poem, in which a longer verse is followed by a shorter one. |
| epodic | relating to an EPODE, a kind of lyric poem. |
| epopee | epic poetry, especially as a literary genre. |
| epopoeia | an epic poem; epic poetry. |
| epos | an epic poem. |
| epyllion | a poem with some resemblance to an epic but shorter > EPYLLIONS or EPYLLIA. [Gk. epullion]. |
| fifteener | a verse of fifteen syllables. |
| fit fitt fitte fytte | a division of a poem. |
| flyting | a dispute or exchange of personal abuse in verse form > FLYTINGS. |
| foot | a division of a line of poetry. |
| fourteener | a verse line of fourteen syllables. |
| fytte | see FIT. |
| galliambic | a classical metre. |
| gauchesco | of a type of Spanish poetry inspired by the life, language and customs of the gaucho. |
| gazal ghazal ghazel | a Persian verse-form. |
| genethliacon | a birthday ode. |
| georgic | a poem on husbandry or rural affairs. [L. georgicus]. |
| georgical | agricultural. |
| ghazal | see GAZAL. |
| ghazel | see GAZAL. |
| glyconic | a line consisting of a SPONDEE, a CHORIAMB, and a PYRRHIC; -- applied to a kind of verse in Greek and Latin poetry. |
| goliard | a wandering scholar in the Middle Ages, known for riotous behaviour and satirical Latin poems lampooning the church. |
| goliardy goliardery | the satirical or ribald poetry of the Goliards. |
| gradus | a dictionary of prosody, designed as an aid in writing Greek or Latin poetry > GRADUSES. |
| haikai | a series of linked HAIKU. No —S. |
| haiku | a syllabic verse-form > HAIKUS. |
| hemistich | half a verse line. |
| hendecasyllable | a metrical line of eleven syllables. |
| hendecasyllabic | of a metricla line, having eleven syllables. |
| hephthemimer | in Greek and Latin prosody, seven half-feet. |
| heptameter | a verse line of seven feet. |
| heptapodic | of a verse, having seven feet. |
| heptapody | the state of having seven feet. |
| heptastich | a poem, strophe, or stanza that consists of seven lines. |
| heptasyllabic | having seven syllables. |
| heroic | (noun) a heroic verse. |
| hexameter | a verse line of six feet. |
| hexametral | like a HEXAMETER. |
| hexametric hexametrical | of verse, written in hexameters. |
| hexapodic | of a line or verse, having six feet. |
| hexapody | a line or verse of six feet. |
| hexastich | a poem or stanza of six lines. |
| hokku | a series of HAIKU. No —S. |
| huitain | a group of eight lines of verse. |
| hypercatalectic | having an additional syllable or half-foot after the last complete DIPODY. |
| hypercatalexis | the state of being HYPERCATALECTIC > HYPERCATALEXES. |
| hypermeter | a verse which has a redundant syllable or foot; a hypercatalectic verse. |
| iamb | a poetic foot consisting of a short then a long syllable. |
| iambic | an IAMB, a poetic foot consisting of a short then a long syllable > IAMBICS; (adj.) consisting of iambs > IAMBICALLY. |
| iambist | one who writes in IAMBICS. |
| iambus | a metrical foot > IAMBI or IAMBUSES. |
| ictal ictic | relating to an ICTUS, a rhythmical or metrical stress. |
| ictus | a recurring stress/accent in a rhythmic/metrical series of sounds; a mark indicating the syllable on which stress/accent occurs > ICTUSES. [L. ictus, a blow]. |
| idyl idyll | a short description in verse or prose of a picturesque scene or incident, esp. in rustic life. |
| idylist idyllist | one who writes IDYLS. |
| idyllian | relating to an IDYLL. |
| idyllic | of or like an IDYLL > IDYLLICALLY. |
| idyllist | see IDYLIST. |
| iliad | a long poem. |
| imagism | an early 20c school of poetry aiming at concentration, clear and simple language, and freedom of form and subject. |
| jingle | a short simple verse often with an associated tune. |
| kenning | a periphrastic formula in Old Norse or other old Germanic poetry. |
| kyrielle | a string of short lines in stanzas all ending with the same word. |
| laisse | a tirade or string of verses on one rhyme. |
| limerick | a form of humorous verse in a five-line jingle. [Said to be from a refrain formerly used, referring to Limerick in Ireland]. |
| limma | in prosody, a pause of one MORA. |
| logaoedic | a verse composed of dactyls and trochees so arranged as to produce a movement like that of ordinary speech. |
| lyric | a lyrical poem. |
| lyrical | having the form of a song > LYRICALLY. |
| lyricise lyricize | to write lyrics. |
| lyricism | the quality of being lyrical. |
| macaronic | mixing words from different languages, especially Latin with vernacular or Latinized vernacular words; (noun) a verse of this type. |
| makar maker | a poet. |
| melic | of a poem, written to be sung. Also (noun) a kind of grass. |
| metre | the regulated succession of groups of syllables (long and short, stressed and unstressed) in which poetry is usually written; (verb) to versify. |
| metrician | a composer of verses. |
| metricise | to convert to metrical form. |
| metricism | the study of metre. |
| metricist | a person skilled in metres, a METRICIAN. |
| metricize | to convert to metrical form. |
| metrics | the study of versification. |
| metrifier | one who metrifies. |
| metrify | to make verse. |
| metrist | a maker of verses. |
| minnesinger | a troubadour-like poet of mediaeval Germany. |
| minstrel | a medieval musician, itinerant or attached to a noble household, who sang or recited his own or others' poems, accompanying himself on a stringed instrument. |
| minstrelsy | the art of the minsrel. |
| mismetre | to spoil the metre (of a poem). |
| misrhymed | badly rhymed. No MISRHYME*. |
| miurus | a hexameter with a short penultimate syllable > MIURUSES. |
| molossus | a verse foot of three long syllables > MOLOSSI. [The adjective of Molossia or Molossis in the Epirus region of ancient Greece, famous in ancient times for its great mastiff dogs]. |
| monodic monodical | relating to MONODY, a mournful ode or poem performed by a single mourner. |
| monodist | a writer of a MONODY. |
| monody | a poem in which the poet laments someone's death. |
| monometer | a rhythmic series, consisting of a single meter. |
| monometric monometrical | like a MONOMETER. |
| monopody | a verse measure of one foot only. |
| monorhyme | a series of lines all rhyming together. |
| monostich | a composition consisting of one verse only. |
| mora | a unit of metrical time in prosody > MORAE or MORAS. |
| mythopoet | a myth-maker; a writer of poems on mythical subjects. |
| nostos | a poem describing a return journey > NOSTOI. |
| octameter | a verse-line of eight feet. |
| octapodic | of a verse line, having eight feet. |
| octapody | a verse-line of eight feet. |
| octastich | a poem or stanza of eight lines. |
| octonarian | in prosody, a line having eight feet. |
| octonarius | in prosody, a line having eight feet > OCTONARII. |
| octosyllabic | (a line) consisting of eight syllables. |
| ode | an elaborate lyric addressed to someone or something. |
| odic | of or pertaining to an ODE. |
| odist | a writer of odes. |
| ollamh ollav | an Irish master poet. |
| paeon paeonic | a foot of four syllables, one long and three short. |
| palinode palinody | an ode or song recanting or retracting something in an earlier poem. |
| pantoum pantun | a verse form in quatrains, in which the second and fourth lines appear as first and third line of next quatrain, and the last line repeats the first line. |
| paracrostic | poem whose initial letters reproduce its first verse. |
| pararhyme | a form of rhyme in which the consonants by not the vowels of the last stressed syllable are identical. |
| paroemiac | the anapaestic dimeter catalectic. |
| passus | a section of a poem or story > PASSUSES. |
| pastourelle | a medieval poem between a knight and a shepherdess. |
| penill pennill | a verse or stanza in Welsh poetry > PENILLION, PENNILLION. |
| pentameter | a line of verse consisting of five metrical feet. |
| pentapodic | relating to PENTAPODY, a measure of five feet. |
| pentapody | a measure or series consisting of five feet. |
| pentastich | a composition consisting of five verses. |
| poem | a composition in verse. |
| poematic | pertaining to a poem, or to poetry; poetical. |
| poesy | to dabble in poetry. |
| poet | one who writes poems. |
| poetaster | an inferior poet. |
| poetess | a female poet. |
| poetic | pertaining to poetry > POETICALLY. |
| poetical | related to poetry > POETICALLY; (noun) a writer of poetry > POETICALS. |
| poeticism | a poetical phrase esp. a trite one. |
| poetics | poetic theory or practice. |
| poeticule | a poetaster. |
| poetise poetize | to write as a poet. |
| poetiser poetizer | one who poetises. |
| poetlike | like a poet. |
| poetresse | a poetess > POETRESSES. |
| poetry | literary work in metrical form. |
| poetship | the state or personality of a poet. |
| proceleusmatic | inciting; encouraging; exhorting; (noun) a metrical foot of four short syllables. |
| prosodial | prosodical. |
| prosodian prosodist | one skilled in PROSODY. |
| prosodic | of or relating to versification. |
| prosody | the study of versification; esp > the systematic study of metrical structure. |
| pyrrhic | a Greek metrical foot consisting of two short syllables. [Gk. pyrriche (orchesis) pyrrhic dance, said to be from Pyrrichos, the inventor]. |
| qasida | a formal Arabic poem of praise. |
| quatorzain | a poem of fourteen lines; a sonnet. |
| quatrain | a stanza of four lines rhyming alternately. |
| renga | (Japanese) a kind of linked verse > RENGAS. |
| rhime | a rhyme. |
| rhyme rime | in two or more words, identity of sound from the last stressed vowel to the end; (verb) to compose verse with corresponding terminal sounds. |
| rhymeless | destitute of rhyme. |
| rhymer rimer | one who composes rhymes. |
| rhymester rimester | a rhymer; a maker of poor poetry. |
| rhymist | a versifier. |
| rimeless | without RIME. |
| rime | see RHYME. |
| rimer | see RHYMER. |
| rimester | see RHYMESTER. |
| rondeau | a poem of 13 lines with two rhymes and the opening words used as a refrain in two places > RONDEAUX. |
| rondel rondelle | a verse form of thirteen or fourteen lines on two rhymes, the seventh and thirteenth being identical with the first, and the eighth and (if present) the fourteenth with the second. |
| rondelet | a short 5 or 7-line rondeau with one refrain per stanza. |
| rubai | a Persian verse-form, a four-line stanza > RUBAIYAT. |
| sapphic | a verse form said to have been invented by the Greek lyric poet Sappho. |
| scald skald | an ancient Scandinavian bard. |
| scaldic skaldic | relating to a SCALD or SKALD. |
| scaldship skaldship | the office of SCALD. |
| scan | to analyse metrically. |
| scansion | the determination of the metre of verse; prosody. |
| scazon | a choliamb > SCAZONS or SCAZONTES. [Gk. scazos, limping]. |
| scazontic | a limping verse, a SCAZON. |
| scop | an Anglo-Saxon poet and harpist. |
| sdrucciola | (of rhyme) triple. |
| seguidilla | a Spanish verse form of seven lines. |
| semeion | in ancient prosody, one of the two divisions of a foot > SEMEIA. |
| semiped | a half foot in poetry. |
| senarius | a Greek or Latin verse containing six iambic feet per line > SENARII. |
| senryu | a 3-line Japanese poem. No —S. |
| septenarius | a seven-foot verse, esp a trochaic tetrameter catalectic. |
| sestina sestine sextain sixain sixaine | a stanza of six lines. |
| sijo | a Korean verse form > SIJOS. |
| sirvente | a (usu. satirical) poem or lay recited by a medieval troubadour. |
| sixain | see SESTINA. |
| sixaine | see SESTINA. |
| sixteener | a verse of sixteen syllables. |
| skald | see SCALD. |
| skaldic | see SCALDIC. |
| skaldship | see SCALDSHIP. |
| sonnet | to write sonnets, to celebrate in sonnets > SONNETS, SONNETING or SONNETTING, SONNETED or SONNETTED. |
| sonnetary | of or like a sonnet. |
| sonneteer | a writer of sonnets, a poetaster. |
| sonneteering | the composition of sonnets. |
| sonnetise sonnetize | to compose sonnets. |
| spondaic | or of pertaining to a spondee; (noun) a spondee. |
| spondee | in verse, a foot of two long syllables. |
| stanza | a division of a poem. |
| stanzaed | in STANZAS. |
| stanzaic | pertaining to, or consisting of, stanzas; as, a couplet in stanzaic form. |
| stanze | a stanza. |
| stanzo | a stanza > STANZOES or STANZOS. |
| stich | a line of verse, or section of prose of comparable length. |
| stichic | relating to verse composed in homogeneous and recurrent lines, as in recitative poetry > STICHICALLY. |
| stichos | a stichometric line of a manuscript; a verse > STICHOI. |
| stornello | an Italian folk verse form > STORNELLI. |
| strophe | a group of lines forming a section of a lyric poem. [Gk. strophe, turning]. |
| strophic strophical | pertaining to, containing, or consisting of, strophes. |
| synaphea synapheia | metrical continuity between two verses in a system. |
| tanka | (Japanese) a 5-line Japanese verse form, its 1st and 3rd lines comprised of 5 syllables, the rest of 7. |
| tautometric tautometrical | exactly corresponding in arrangement of syllables. |
| telestich | a poem in which the consecutive final letters of the lines spell a name. Cf. ACROSTIC, where it is the initial letters. |
| tenson tenzon | a competition in verse between two troubadours [Fr. from L. tensio, a struggle]. |
| tercet tiercet terzetta | a triplet of lines that rhyme together or are connected with adjacent rhymes. |
| tetrabrach | a word or metrical foot composed of four short syllables. |
| tetrameter | a verse or line consisting of four measures, that is, in iambic, trochaic, and anapestic verse, of eight feet; in other kinds of verse, of four feet. |
| tetrapodic | of verse, having four metrical feet. |
| tetrapody | a set of four metrical feet. |
| tetrasemic | in Greek prosody, equivalent to four short syllables. |
| tetrastich | a stanza, epigram, or poem, consisting of four verses or lines. |
| tiercet | see TERCET. |
| tribrach | a poetic foot of three short syllables. |
| trichronous | trisemic. |
| trimeter | a verse of three measures. |
| trimetric trimetrical | relating to a TRIMETER, a verse of three measures. |
| triolet | an eight-lined poem rhymed ab aa abab, lines 4 and 7 repeating 1, and 8 repeating 2. |
| triplet | three lines rhyming together. |
| tripody | three metrical feet taken together, or included in one measure. |
| triseme | a foot containing three short syllables. [Gk. trisemos, from sema, a sign]. |
| trisemic | relating to a TRISEME, a foot containing three short syllables. |
| tristich | a stanza of three lines. |
| trochaic | of or like a TROCHEE; (noun) a trochaic verse. |
| trochee | in prosody, a foot of one long syllable, one short. |
| troubadour trouvere trouveur | one of a school of poets who flourished in Northern France from the eleventh to the fourteenth century. |
| unrhymed | not rhymed. |
| unrimed | not rimed. |
| unscanned | not scanned as verse. |
| vers | verse. |
| verse | to versify. |
| verselet | a small verse. |
| verseman | one who writes verses, an inferior poet. |
| verser | a versifier. |
| verset | a verse. |
| versifier versificator | a maker of verses. |
| versify | to change from prose into metrical form. |
| verslibrist | one who writes vers libre, free verse. |
| villanelle | a poem consisting of five tercets and a quatrain. |
| virelai virelay | an old French lyric form in two-rhymed stanzas of short lines. |
| waka | (Japanese) a Japanese verse-form. |
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