Each line has the uncommon number of five measures the same as the first part, butmetrically the part is in 4/4 rhythm.
Muir (John), Additional Moral and Religious Passages metrically rendered from the Sanskrit.
In Arabic, on the other hand, the answer to the question, what is metrically long or short, is exceedingly simple, and flows with stringent cogency from the nature of the Arabic Alphabet.
The Lay of the Nibelungs, metrically translated from the old German text by Alice Horton, and edited by Edward Bell, M.
Metrically translated from the Old German text by Alice Horton, and Edited by Edward Bell, M.
The sentence as it stands is without a main verb, and 1377^a is metrically deficient.
What follows, which I do not remember literatim, is suchmetrically as to require two syllables for aches.
These ganas were metrically arranged in the Ganaratna-mahodadhi, composed by Vardhamana in 1140 A.
Peace may perhaps be metrically a dissyllable, as in A.
In 1 the last syllable of dignity and in 3 the last of mutiny aremetrically equivalent to accented syllables.
Of disobedient opposition") only two regular accents occur, but we have a metrical accent on the first syllable of disobedient, and on the first and the last syllables of opposition, which word has metrically five syllables.
The second strophe and second antistrophe are identical metrically with the first, the second epode with the first epode; and so on.
One of the most successful metrically of purely trochaic poems is Browning's One Word More, a few lines of which are quoted on page 70.
And in that metricallynotorious line of Tennyson's-- Take your own time, Annie, take your own time.
There is no reason why a metrically 5-stress line should not contain only two prose stresses, but examples are of course rare.
In direct contrast to these lines whose effectiveness springs from a lack of the normal quantity of stress are those which are metrically overweighted.
E has wyll, which leaves the line metrically short of a syllable.
C discumfit (S), which is metrically short, and does not suit the context or the sense.
Ovid uses the metrically convenient Hister fifteen times in the Ex Ponto, as against two instances only of Danuuius (IV ix 80 & x 58).
Quadrisyllable endings are frequent in the metrically strict Claudian.
The interchange of adjoining metrically and grammatically equivalent substantives is very common.
Compare Ovid's frequent use of the metrically convenient ablative in -e of third-declension adjectives.
Capitolinus ismetrically awkward; hence the synecdoche from the Tarpeia rupes, the part of the Capitoline from which criminals were hurled.
The grammatically and metrically correct reading of G appears to me to explain the subsequent variation.
The reading of the 1633 edition, which is that of the best manuscripts, has more of Donne's characteristic hyperbole than the metrically more regular 'Vertue in woman see'.
To place 'he was' at the end of the line was in the circumstances to court ambiguity, and is not metrically requisite.
The exclamatory pause after 'Bacon' is metrically equivalent to an accented syllable.
Abrupt outcry, in which the less and the more forcible exclamatory pauses are metrically provided for by the lacking thesis and arsis respectively.
The antistrophe corresponds metrically to the strophe, as usual; the epodes are in four-stress couplets.
This contraction is employed only when the article is metrically placed as a proclitic before another word, and is thereby shorn of its separate pronunciation as follows: =Th' ambitious= bard a nobler theme essays.
Metrically there is much roughness, which careful study and diligent reading of good verse can in time correct.
In the interior of a verse also the words not ending in an unaccented e are always metrically treated according to their full syllabic value, e.
We therefore confine our remarks to the formative and inflexional syllables, which, though as a rule found only in thesis, admit of being treated metrically in three different ways.
In the Ormulum irregularities of this kind never occur, a certain proof that Orm thought them metrically inadmissible, and felt that an extra syllable at the end of the first hemistich would disturb the flow of the rhythm.
The literary value of Godric’s verses is small, but they are the first compositions we have in Northern English after the Conquest, and metrically interesting.
Genesis A the metrically equivalent on fyore lifde is not so reckoned (pp.
Morsbach concludes that Beowulf cannot have been composed before 700, since it contains a number of half-verses which would have been metrically impossible before the operation of these changes, e.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "metrically" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.