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The most common meter in literary verse by far is the anapestic tetrameter: (u)uSuuSuuSuuS. It is also used in the [[Verse:Tricin/King Sămtsay Song|King Sămtsay Song]], the Bjeheondian national anthem.
The most common meter in literary verse by far is the anapestic tetrameter: (u)uSuuSuuSuuS. It is also used in the [[Verse:Tricin/King Sămtsay Song|King Sămtsay Song]], the Bjeheondian national anthem.
Some other meters are:
*Free verse
*Rhyming prose, like poetic sections of the Imθumăytil
*Piyyut meters (but not piyyut rhyming) from Netagin poetry


Iambic meters and meters that use a combination of iambs and anapests are also used. An iambic meter that goes back to Classical Windermere verse is the ''chinung tălach'' ('hexad meter', more literally 'hexad count'), a form of alexandrine where each line consists of two iambic trimeter hemistichs separated by a caesura. The first of each group of three feet may occasionally be a trochee.
Iambic meters and meters that use a combination of iambs and anapests are also used. An iambic meter that goes back to Classical Windermere verse is the ''chinung tălach'' ('hexad meter', more literally 'hexad count'), a form of alexandrine where each line consists of two iambic trimeter hemistichs separated by a caesura. The first of each group of three feet may occasionally be a trochee.
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''— from Dzüłəf's Song''
''— from Dzüłəf's Song''
</poem>
</poem>
Some other meters are:
*Free verse
*Rhyming prose, like poetic sections of the Imθumăytil
*Piyyut meters (but not piyyut rhyming)? From Netagin poetry
==== Gibberish piyyut ====
==== Gibberish piyyut ====
<poem>
<poem>