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metrical foot การใช้

"metrical foot" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • Prosodic units occur at a metrical foot and phonological word to a complete utterance.
  • Generally speaking, when is followed by within a metrical foot it is fronted to.
  • Elizabethan poems and plays were often written in iambic meters, based on a metrical foot of two syllables, one unstressed and one stressed.
  • :According to the Italian WP is a metrical foot in poetry, consisting of a dactyl and a spondee .-- talk ) 18 : 48, 30 July 2009 ( UTC)
  • The cretic or amphimacer metrical foot, with three syllables, the first and last of which are long and the second short, is sometimes also called a "'paeon diagyios " '.
  • The number of syllables per line in the lyrics to " Lateralus " correspond to an arrangement of the Fibonacci numbers and the song " Jambi " uses and makes a reference to the common metrical foot transcendence in " Lateralus ".
  • In most sources there were six rhythmic modes, as first explained in the anonymous treatise of about 1260, " De mensurabili musica " ( formerly attributed to brevis " ) corresponding to a metrical foot, as follows:
  • Note how the word endings do not coincide with the end of a metrical foot; for the early part of the line this forces the natural accent of each word to lie in the middle of a foot, playing against the natural rhythm of the ictus.
  • In dactylic hexameter, a caesura occurs any time the ending of a word does not coincide with the beginning or the end of a metrical foot; in modern prosody, however, it is only called one when the ending also coincides with an audible pause in the line.
  • For instance, using traditional principles of scansion, stanza two may be scanned as shown below, where syllables in all caps represent metrical beats, lower-case syllables represent metrical off-beats, the vertical bar represents the termination of a metrical foot, and apostrophes represent elisions.
  • At the " low end " are forms such as the "'limerick "', which follows a metrical pattern of two lines of anapestic trimeter ( three anapests per line ), followed by two lines of anapestic dimeter ( two anapests per line ), followed by one line of anapestic trimeter . ( The beginning of the metrical foot does not have to coincide with the beginning of the line . ) Any poem following this metrical pattern would generally be considered a limerick, however most also follow an AABBA rhyme scheme.