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*Zero or more caesurae in each line. | *Zero or more caesurae in each line. | ||
The most common meter in literary | The most common meter in literary verse by far is the anapaestic tetrameter. | ||
One meter that was inherited from Classical Windermere poetry was ''chinung tălach'' ('hexad meter', more literally 'hexad count'), a form of alexandrine where each line consists of two iambic trimeter halves separated by a caesura. The first of each group of three feet may occasionally be a trochee. | |||
Gibberish: | Gibberish: | ||
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''Ya seaf łă'och łă'och — f imdoats dihachămtuang.'' | ''Ya seaf łă'och łă'och — f imdoats dihachămtuang.'' | ||
</poem> | </poem> | ||
Some other meters are: | Some other meters are: |
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