Verse (poetry)

Verse (Latin versus, of vertere, turn ' ) refers to a series of metric poetry structured rhythms. Signs are usually set in rows and therefore also referred to as lines of verse.

The rhythmic structure to which comes on the circumstances of rhyme, assonance and alliteration, is therefore the main condition of the verse; the regular recurrence of a similar rhythm in verse is called the meter ( meter ), the individual parts that make up the meter, the metrical foot is (roughly equivalent to the clock ( music) ). Application of different versification teaches the art of verse (see metrics and prosody ).

Depending on whether contained in a verse, the meter or meter one or more times, ie, the verse manometer, Dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter and hexameter ( one-, two -, three-, four-, five -, Sechsmaß ). But since the last meter of the verse is not always complete, divide the verses in katalektische or unvollzählige and akatalektische or full complement. Includes the verse in the middle of the last metrical, that is his name brachykatalektisch or halbvollzählig, but he is a syllable longer, hyperkatalektisch or redundant.

"One should really all that needs to rise above the common design at least initially, in verse, because the plate is nowhere so into the light, as if it is pronounced in bound style of writing. "

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