Luthic: Difference between revisions

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=====Written media=====
=====Written media=====
Luthic is mostly found as written media, However newspapers usually use Italian and reserve Luthic for sarcastic commentaries and caricatures. [[w:Headline|Headlines]] in Luthic are common. The [[w:Letter to the editor|letter to the editor]] section often includes entire paragraphs in Luthic. Many newspapers also regularly publish personal columns in Luthic. Most comedies are written in Luthic. [[w:Comic book|Comic books]] are often written in Luthic instead of Italian. In novels and short stories, most of the Luth authors, write the dialogues in their Luthic dialects.
[[File:Luthic_comic.jpg|thumb|A panel from the Luthic edition of [[w:Batman: Three Jokers|''Batman: Three Jokers'']]]]
Luthic is mostly found as written media, However newspapers usually use Italian and reserve Luthic for sarcastic commentaries and caricatures. [[w:Headline|Headlines]] in Luthic are common. The [[w:Letter to the editor|letter to the editor]] section often includes entire paragraphs in Luthic. Many newspapers also regularly publish personal columns in Luthic. Most comedies are written in Luthic. [[w:Comic book|Comic books]] are often written in Luthic instead of Italian. Luthic also has many translated editions of [[w:American comic book|American comic books]], specifically the ones published by [[w:DC Comics|DC Comics]]. In novels and short stories, most of the Luth authors, write the dialogues in their Luthic dialects.


Within Luthic poetry, the [[w:Iamb (poetry)|iambic verse]] is a very popular choice together with [[w:Trochee|trochaic verses]], a very famous Luthic poem, known as '''Manu ad Amare''' “ready to love”, by Lucia Giamane, is composed of two iambic [[w:Quatrain|quatrains]], with a rhyme scheme of ABAB:
Within Luthic poetry, the [[w:Iamb (poetry)|iambic verse]] is a very popular choice together with [[w:Trochee|trochaic verses]], a very famous Luthic poem, known as '''Manu ad Amare''' “ready to love”, by Lucia Giamane, is composed of two iambic [[w:Quatrain|quatrains]], with a rhyme scheme of ABAB:
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