The stanza no longer provides him with space enough: and here his whole twenty-eight lines are one continuous strain, with no break in them and scarcely any pause, in ten-syllabled lines of boldly varied rhyme and accent.
To which the bird's noisy three-syllabled cry responded like three cheers!
Men had not a hammer to begin with, not a syllabled articulation: they had it all to make;-- and they have made it.
Rupert Filgee, a sympathetic if not always a correct reader, who boldly took four and five syllabled fences flying only to come to grief perhaps in the ditch of some rhetorical pause beyond, alone expressed his scorn of her performance.
Yet even then she seemed to be waiting some reply more potent than that syllabled on the lips of the man before her.
As regards the poem itself, it is written in trochaic eight-syllabled lines with alliteration and the part-line echo, the metre which Longfellow adopted for Hiawatha.
The ten-syllabled line brings but a faint echo of the long roll of the Homeric hexameter, its rapid movement and continuous harmony.
And through her spells you shall behold The blue turn gray, the gray turn gold Of hollow heaven; and the brown Of twilight vistas twinkled down With fireflies; and in the gloom Feel the cool vowels of perfume Slow-syllabled of weed and bloom.
Deeper than all the rest was still another feeling, which had hardly risen into the region of inwardly articulated thought, but lay unshaped beneath all the syllabled trains of sleeping or waking consciousness.
Men had not a hammer to begin with, not a syllabled articulation: they had it all to make;--and they have made it.
Besides following Wyatt in making the sonnet known to English readers, Surrey was the first to write in blank verse, that is in long ten-syllabled lines which do not rime.
Fletcher constantly used the eleven-syllabled lines, employing them indeed so regularly and consciously that he is betrayed into a certain monotoneous mannerism.
Her hand was admirably calculated, together with her use of many-syllabled words, to fill up a sheet, and then came the pride and delight of crossing.
The norm of the verse was the eight-syllabled riming couplet used in most of the English metrical romances of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
There is no limit to the variety of these lively verse-tales, which are invariably written in eight-syllabled couplets.
It has been said that the excellence of the twelve-syllabled verse used in this romance was the origin of the term alexandrine.
A two-syllabled whistle or a harsh, discordant scream.
England in twelve-syllabled verse, full of antiquarian and historical details, so accurate as to make the work an authority on such matters.
In his translation of the Odyssey, Chapman employed the ten-syllabled heroic line chosen by most of the standard translators; but for the Iliad he used the long "fourteener.
It may be syllabled as kli-ou-kli-ou, and during the breeding season is very persistently uttered.
Its food is not known to differ from that of the preceding species; its flight is equally rapid; and its note, short and musical, has been syllabled as tong.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "syllabled" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.