138,982
edits
m (→Rhyming poetry) |
m (→Rhyming poetry) |
||
Line 1,124: | Line 1,124: | ||
Rhyming poetry is often said to be from [[Windermere/Classical|Windermere]] and [[Tseer/Classical|Tseer]] influence, as poetry in these languages tend to use rhyme. | Rhyming poetry is often said to be from [[Windermere/Classical|Windermere]] and [[Tseer/Classical|Tseer]] influence, as poetry in these languages tend to use rhyme. | ||
*'''Stress-based meters''' like trochaic/iambic/dactylic meters: the iambic pentameter is common as in English. These meters were directly borrowed from late Classical Windermere and Tseer poetry. | *'''Stress-based meters''' like trochaic/iambic/dactylic meters: the iambic pentameter is common as in English. These meters were directly borrowed from late Classical Windermere and Tseer poetry. | ||
*'''Quantitative meters''' arose in the vernacular poetic tradition. Like | *'''Quantitative meters''' arose in the vernacular poetic tradition. Like many Hebrew piyyutim, these meters are based on a pattern of long and short syllables, where short = a syllable ending in [ə] and long = everything else. (The last L in a line can be replaced by a trochee.) Issue: too many longs? | ||
**sLLLsLLL (hazaj) | **sLLLsLLL (hazaj) | ||
**sLLsLLLsLLsLLL | **sLLsLLLsLLsLLL |
edits