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In poetry, a dimeter /ˈdɪmɪtər/ is a metrical line of verse with two feet. The particular foot can vary. Consider Thomas Hood's "Bridge of Sighs," in
Dimeter
Basic repeating rhythmic unit in a line of poetry
according to the number of feet they contain, using the terms monometer, dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, and octameter
Metrical_foot
Metrical foot
trochee. Key: Non-bold = unstressed syllable Bold = stressed syllable Iambic dimeter is a meter referring to a line consisting of two iambic feet. The way a
Iamb_(poetry)
1920 poem written by Robert Frost
two lines. The poem's meter is an irregular mix of iambic tetrameter and dimeter, and the rhyme scheme (which is ABA ABC BCB) suggests but departs from
Fire_and_Ice_(poem)
Metric line consisting of five iambic feet
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Iambic_pentameter
1914 poem by Robert Frost
pentameter and dimeter. The remainder of the poem is composed of variations on the iambic meter, containing iambic pentameter, trimeter, dimeter, and monometer
After_Apple-Picking
Line consisting of four iambic feet
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Iambic_tetrameter
Metrical line of verses consisting of six feet
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Hexameter
Form of lyrical poetry
origin may be an "anaclastic" variant of the Ionic dimeter (u u – – u u – –), i.e. an ionic dimeter with the 4th and 5th syllables reversed; but whether
Anacreontics
Basic rhythmic structure of a verse or lines in verse
syllable If the line has only one foot, it is called a monometer; two feet, dimeter; three is trimeter; four is tetrameter; five is pentameter; six is hexameter
Metre_(poetry)
American poet (1830–1886)
pentameter, opting more generally for trimeter, tetrameter and, less often, dimeter. Sometimes her use of these meters is regular, but oftentimes it is irregular
Emily_Dickinson
Poem by Emily Dickinson
States Language English Publisher Roberts Brothers Publication date 1891 (1891) Lines 12 Metre Dimeter Full text Wild Nights — Wild Nights! at Wikisource
Wild_Nights_–_Wild_Nights!
Feature of poetic metre
– u | – u – – |, which they believed was derived from a regular ionic dimeter | u u – – | u u – – | by a reversal of syllables 4 and 5, creating metra
Anaclasis_(poetry)
Metrical foot
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Trochee
finally stops behind the door" (p. 35). The iambic pentameter (and iambic dimeter) rhythm of this poem can be considered an illustration of its subject matter
Ho,_mia_kor'
Line of verse with just one metrical foot or dipody
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Monometer
1785 Scots-language poem by Robert Burns
with iambic tetrameter A {\displaystyle \mathrm {A} } lines and iambic dimeter B {\displaystyle \mathrm {B} } lines, both with frequent hypercatalexis
To_a_Mouse
Hadrian's last poem
feminine singular, describing the soul. Each line is underlyingly an iambic dimeter (u – u – | u – u –), but in lines 1 and 4 the first two long elements have
Animula_vagula_blandula
Inscription consisting of the letters of an alphabet
17th-century Boston, includes an abecedary of rhyming couplets in iambic dimeter, beginning with: In Adam’s fall, We sinned all. Thy life to mend, This
Abecedarium
Study of Latin poetic laws of metre
pentameter is replaced by an iambic dimeter. This combination is called the second Archilochian. The iambic dimeter keeps the elements of a line-end, i
Latin_prosody
2nd-century Roman historians and poets
characteristic was the use of lighter and graceful meters (anapaestic and iambic dimeters), which had hitherto found little favour." Since Cameron's article on the
Florus
Latin hymn in honour of John the Baptist
consisting of three Sapphic hendecasyllables followed by an adonius (a type of dimeter). The chant is useful for teaching singing because of the way it uses successive
Ut_queant_laxis
1915 poem by G. K. Chesterton
roughly paeonic tetrameter couplets, often ending in a quatrain of four dimeter lines. The poem tells of the defeat of the Ottoman fleet of Ali Pasha by
Lepanto_(poem)
Type of meter (poetry)
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Trimeter
Type of intermittent rhyming
rhymed A A A B C C C B {\displaystyle \mathrm {AAABCCCB} } ; the shorter (dimeter) B {\displaystyle \mathrm {B} } -lines form the 'tail' lines and appear
Tail_rhyme
Aspect of Vedic studies
equivalent to the Greek iambic dimeter. The sacred Gayatri metre of the Hindus consists of three of such iambic dimeter lines, and this embedded metre
Sanskrit_prosody
Metrical foot
lines and fully cretic measures. English Renaissance songs employed cretic dimeter fairly frequently (e.g. "Shall I die? Shall I fly?" attributed to William
Cretic
Metre in classical Arabic poetry
| ⏓ – – | ( trimeter catalectic) | ⏓ ⏓ ⏑ – | ⏓ ⏓ ⏑ – | (dimeter) | ⏓ ⏓ ⏑ – | ⏓ – – | (dimeter catalectic) Uniquely among the classical Arabic metres,
Rajaz
Poetic stanza, rhyming ABABBCC
pentameter, occasionally other lines are employed. Thomas Wyatt used iambic dimeter in his Revocation: What should I say? —Since Faith is dead, And Truth away
Rhyme_royal
Fixed verse form
write. There must be two stanzas, each comprising three lines of dactylic dimeter ( ¯ ˘ ˘ ¯ ˘ ˘ ) followed by a line consisting of just a choriamb ( ¯ ˘ ˘ ¯ )
Double_dactyl
Poem
its lines switch between iambic and trochaic trimeter, tetrameter, and dimeter. It is divided into nine distinct stanzas, each stanza as a quatrain with
Poppies_(poem)
Poetic line of four trochaic feet
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Trochaic_tetrameter
British experimental poet
anagrammed lines poems, and minimalist sonnets composed in iambic monometer and dimeter. He has occasionally tweets triolets, a form for which has expressed a
Anthony_Etherin
Poetic meter with eight trochaic metrical feet per line
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Trochaic_octameter
{AAABAB} } , with tetrameter A {\displaystyle \mathrm {A} } lines and dimeter B {\displaystyle \mathrm {B} } lines. The second B {\displaystyle \mathrm
Burns_stanza
Poetic line consisting of 14 syllables
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Fourteener_(poetry)
2005 novella by Margaret Atwood
chapters, beginning with a jump-rope rhyme and ending in a 17-line iambic dimeter poem. Other narrative styles used by the Chorus include a lament, a folk
The_Penelopiad
moral lesson for the reader. digest size digression dime novel diameter dimeter A line of verse made up of two feet (two stresses). dipody A pair of metrical
Glossary_of_literary_terms
Verse of the classic meter
keeping the iambic ending, an original iambic dimeter could change to a glyconic: x – u – | u – u – (iambic dimeter) x x – u | u – u – (glyconic) (A similar
Glyconic
Metres used in Plautus and Terence
first word is a monosyllable. Anapaestic lines are usually based on the dimeter or quaternarius, that is a length of two metra, or four feet. According
Metres_of_Roman_comedy
single glance!" This Persian version is a tetrameter, divided into two dimeters, and every metron is of the form | uu – u – |. (Poems are also commonly
Kamil_(metre)
Section, line, or type of poem in Ancient Greek poetry
epodes are composed in alternate verses of iambic trimeter and iambic dimeter, as at, for example, Epode 5.1–2: At o deorum quicquid in caelo regit terras
Epode
Metre used in Hebrew biblical poetry
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Qinah_(metre)
Greek and Latin poetic form
by a dactylic tetrameter. A dactylic hexameter, followed by an iambic dimeter + dactylic hemiepes: – u u – u u – u u – u u – u u – x x – u – x –
Archilochian
Metrical pattern in poetry
In classical grammatical terminology it can be described as a trochaic dimeter catalectic, i.e. a combination of two groups of two trochees each (— u
Lekythion
US comic book series
museum. This leads the Caped Crusader again to cross paths with Marius Dimeter, as the duo fight an undead army summoned by Combs. It is revealed that
Batman_Confidential
Collection of poems by Horace
of an iambic trimeter (three sets of two iambs) followed by an iambic dimeter (two sets of two iambs). Possible caesurae are indicated by a vertical
Epodes_(Horace)
Aria from The Magic Flute
There are five quatrains, of which the third is written in amphibrachic dimeter and the remaining ones in iambic tetrameter, which is the normal meter
O zittre nicht, mein lieber Sohn
O_zittre_nicht,_mein_lieber_Sohn
Poetic meter of four metrical feet
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Tetrameter
1850 poem by Henry David Thoreau
transcendentalist philosophy. [1] The poem is primarily composed of short lines of dimeter and trimeter, making heavy of use of rhyming couplets and slant rhymes
The_Old_Marlborough_Road
Repeating 3 to 6-syllable section of a poetic metre
(mória tôn ruthmôn) "parts of the rhythms". The words δίμετρον dímetron "dimeter", τρίμετρον trímetron "trimeter" and τετράμετρον tetrámetron "tetrameter"
Metron_(poetry)
Metrical foot
deathbed, Animula vagula blandula. Each line of the poem is in an iambic dimeter (u – u – | u – u –), but in the first and fourth lines the first two long
Tribrach_(poetry)
Term in the study of poetic metre
themes include: The slow movement to Haydn's Surprise Symphony (spondaic dimeter catalectic) The theme of Weber's Rondo brillante in E-flat (anapestic tetrameter
Catalexis
single metrical line. Monometer: a line of verse with just 1 metrical foot. Dimeter: a line of verse with 2 metrical feet. Trimeter: a line of verse with 3
Glossary_of_poetry_terms
Lithuanian and Polish saint (1458–1484)
meter and rhyme scheme (alternate acatalectic and catalectic trochaic dimeter with internal rhyme in the first and third verses (aa/b, cc/b)) and was
Saint_Casimir
Bulgarian bass singer (1936–2014)
Richard Bonynge - (Decca) 1973 - "Boris Godunov" - Nicola Ghiuselev, Dimeter Damyanov, Alexandrina Milcheva - Sofia National Opera Chorus and Orchestra
Nicola_Ghiuselev
Arabic poetry meter
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Wafir
irregular strophic rhyme of "Troll sat alone on his seat of stone", the iambic dimeter of "We come"/"To Isengard", or the ballad stanza of "An Elven-maid there
Tolkien's_poetry
5th-century Christian poet
A solis ortus cardine, consisting of twenty-three quatrains of iambic dimeters. This poem has partly passed into the Roman Rite liturgy, the first seven
Coelius_Sedulius
Poem by Edgar Allan Poe
alternately rhymed trimeter-dimeters. Part II generally uses pentameter couplets with an interlude of anapestic dimeters. Poe claimed he wrote "Al Aaraaf"
Al_Aaraaf
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Tawil
1936 poem by Irish author Louis MacNeice
lines or trimeters, except for the fifth line of each stanza, which is a dimeter. The rhyme scheme is ABCBBA. The A rhyme in the first stanza ("garden/pardon")
The_Sunlight_on_the_Garden
Comedy by Aristophanes
skirmish. trochaic tetrameters [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-] but with trochaic dimeters or 'runs' added. line 403 Agon 526–630 & 631–724 songs and anapestic tetrameter
The_Wasps
Musical compositions from Ancient Greece
the paean, while the tenth in aeolic rhythms (glyconics and choriambic dimeters) is the prosodion. Slightly more lines of the music have survived than
Delphic_Hymns
Latin hymn
Christian poet Sedulius. The abecedarius recounts in 23 quatrains of iambic dimeter the nativity, miracles and passion of Christ. With the other Latin texts
A_solis_ortus_cardine
(c.750–720 BCE) Greek inscription
to follow an iambic rhythm (υ – υ – υ –). It consists of a short iambic dimeter ot trimeter, possibly the earliest recorded example of this kind, that
Acesander's_cup
Literary work by Samuel Beckett
rocking chair have rockers. "[T]he synchrony of the rocking motion and the dimeter verse line – one back-and-forth per line – plays against the recorded narrative
Rockaby
Body of literary work by Roman poet Catullus from 62 to 54 BC
poem uses iambic tetrameter catalectic (25), which consists of two iambic dimeters, the second one catalectic (i.e. shortened by one syllable). It begins:
Poetry_of_Catullus
Breviary. It comprises three strophes of four verses in Classical iambic dimeter, the verses rhyming in couplets, together with a fourth concluding strophe
Rex_gloriose_martyrum
Latin poetry collection
first of these lines is known as a "greater Archilochian". (a trochaic dimeter catalectic, followed by an iambic trimeter catalectic) Book 2: 18 – ᴗ –
Odes_(Horace)
Process of investigating the form of a poem in an informed way
trimeter (three anapests per line), followed by two lines of anapestic dimeter (two anapests per line), followed by one line of anapestic trimeter. (The
Poetry_analysis
Ancient Roman poet
that Alphius Avitus composed a work about "Illustrious Men", in iambic dimeters, extending to several books; and eight lines are cited by Priscian from
Alphius_Avitus
with some lines written in iambic pentameter, iambic tetrameter, iambic dimeter, trochaic pentameter, and trochaic tetrameter. The poem begins with Peter's
Tiara_(poem)
Daily hymn for None in the Roman Catholic Breviary
comprises (like the hymns for Terce and Sext) only two stanzas of iambic dimeters together with a doxology, varying according to the feast or season. As
Rerum,_Deus,_tenax_vigor
"Cathemerinon" of Prudentius. This twelfth poem or hymn contains 52 iambic dimeter strophes, and an irregular selection from its 208 lines has furnished four
Quicumque_Christum_Quærtis
Body of literary work by Ancient Greek poet Sappho
Fr. 102; the meter of the two lines quoted by Hephaestion is an iambic dimeter, followed by a glyconic and a bacchius (u - u - u - - u u - u - u - -)
Poetry_of_Sappho
Latin hymnody in from the 4th century
hymns as “Ambrosian”. The Ambrosian strophe has four verses of iambic dimeters (eight syllables), e. g. — Aeterne rerum Conditor, / noctem diemque qui
Ambrosian_hymns
Theory and practice of versification
about modern poetry. Anapaestic verse is always found in dimeters or tetrameters, each dimeter consisting of four feet. The most common type of foot is
Greek_prosody
Fragment of a poem by Corinna
is composed in six-line stanzas, of which the first five are in ionic dimeter, and the sixth is a ten-syllable clasula, of the form uu--uu-u--. The surviving
Contest of Cithaeron and Helicon
Contest_of_Cithaeron_and_Helicon
Adaptation of the Sapphic stanza for the Polish language
consists of four longer lines (iambic tetrameters) and two shorter (iambic dimeters): But Mousie, thou art no thy-lane, In proving foresight may be vain: The
Sapphic stanza in Polish poetry
Sapphic_stanza_in_Polish_poetry
Poetic metre used in Ancient Greek and Latin
the 6th-century BC singer Anacreon. In the following couplet, an ionic dimeter is combined with an anacreontic. The resultant line resembles a sotadean
Sotadean_metre
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Octameter
Bishop of Toul and Catholic saint
Bishop Jamblichus of Trier. The text is written in poem form of 164 iambic dimeters. He is considered an early example of rhythmic anthemstrophy, in the word
Auspicius_of_Toul
Species of flowering plant
Territory and Queensland, Australia. It is a slender woody climber with a stem dimeter up to 2 cm (0.79 in). It grows in seasonally dry tropical forests. "Taxon
Tinospora_esiangkara
Metre used in classical Arabic poetry
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Basit
Classical Arabic Poetic Metre
v t e Poetic meters Meter Monometer Dimeter Trimeter Tetrameter Pentameter Hexameter Heptameter Octameter Meters by metrical feet Iamb Iambic tetrameter
Madīd_(metre)
Albanian revolutionary and political leader
Albania, among whom is Menduh Zavalani. The Albanian people dedicated a dimeter verse to Menduh Zavalani and the two other martyr patriots Themistokli
Menduh_Zavalani
Genre of ancient Greek poetry
line of iambic trimeter (six iambic feet) is followed by a line of iambic dimeter (four iambic feet). Here it is broken into four-line stanzas to bring out
Iambus_(genre)
English Easter hymn
"soldiers" and "palace". The original Latin hymn is written in iambic dimeter, with lines of 8 syllables each in quatrains with an a-a-b-b rhyme scheme
Ye_Choirs_of_New_Jerusalem
Latin hymn used during Lent
authorship of this hymn. It is written as five strophes of octosyllabic iambic dimeter. As proof of its antiquity, half of its 20 lines are rhymed, in the unschematic
Audi_benigne_Conditor
Form of literature, in verse
metrical feet in a line are described in Greek terminology as follows: dimeter – two feet trimeter – three feet tetrameter – four feet pentameter – five
Outline_of_poetry
Component of J. R. R. Tolkien's writing
irregular strophic rhyme of "Troll sat alone on his seat of stone", the iambic dimeter of "We come"/"To Isengard", or the ballad stanza of "An Elven-maid there
Poetry in The Lord of the Rings
Poetry_in_The_Lord_of_the_Rings
Metre used in poetry of Middle East and western Asia languages
common variations are: In classical Arabic the hazaj is generally used in a dimeter version of four feet. There is also a catalectic version in which the last
Hazaj_meter
Poetic metre used in Greek and Latin, especially in Roman comedy
the closest Arabic metre. However, the Arabic ramal is usually either a dimeter or a trimeter with this form: | x u – – | x u – – | x u – (–) | x2 According
Trochaic_septenarius
Latin Christian hymn
the opening line "En clara vox redarguit." The hymn is written in iambic dimeter and it is a retelling of the preaching of John the Baptist, announcing
Vox_clara_ecce_intonat
Metres of Persian poetry
suggested that the anacreontic may be derived by anaclasis from an ionic dimeter (u u – – u u – –). The same doubled metre 5.3.08(2) is used in a poem by
Persian_metres
inexorable advance. For this, Browning uses the association of a rhymed dimeter, which delays the punctuation of each hexameter, thus providing a regular
Thematic focus of Robert Browning's poetic work
Thematic_focus_of_Robert_Browning's_poetic_work
Lux Beata Caelitum) and Lauds (O Gente Felix Hospita) are in classical dimeter iambics, four-lined stanzas, of which the Vespers hymn contains six and
Sacra_jam_splendent
Section of Catholic liturgy
breviaries, and soon enjoyed widespread circulation; all its verses are iambic dimeters, but the rhythm does not as yet coincide with the natural accent of the
Rhythmical_office
DIMETER
DIMETER
DIMETER
DIMETER
Girl/Female
Latin American Greek
Mother of the gods.
Boy/Male
Arabic
Handsome.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Chidanand | சிதாநஂத
Lord Brahma
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Telugu
King of the Earth
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Estimator
Girl/Female
Gaelic Irish
Brave.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Lord of Lotus; Name of Lord Vishnu
Female
English
English name derived from the flower name, GARDENIA means simply "gardenia flower."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English pē ‘peacock’ (see Peacock).
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
The Avenger; He who Punishes Wrongdoers; One who Takes Revenge; Name; Abdul Muntaqim
DIMETER
DIMETER
DIMETER
DIMETER
DIMETER
a.
Consisting of two iambic dimeters catalectic, the last of which lacks the final syllable; -- said of a kind of verse.
a.
Having two poetical measures or meters.
n.
A verse of two meters.