Scellan: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
7 bytes added ,  30 November 2019
m
Line 1,115: Line 1,115:
*'''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 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. Issue: too many longs?
*'''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. Issue: too many longs?
**sLLLsLLL (hazaj)
**sLLLsLLL (hazaj/marnin)
**sLLsLLLsLLsLLL
**sLLsLLLsLLsLLL
**LLsLLLsLLL (Yigdal meter)
**LLsLLLsLLL (Yigdal meter)
138,759

edits

Navigation menu