Sonnet 126 is, unusually, a poem in six rhymed couplets rather than a sonnet proper. |
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His four-line verses or quatrains, each of two rhymed couplets, were written in groups of 100, known as Centuries. |
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From the point of view of adequacy, it makes no difference whether we have before us a prose poem or rhymed verse. |
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My rationale was, if you can enunciate densely rhymed verse, and understand the syntax, you can speak the language. |
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The following weekend I burned the midnight oil translating one of the eclogues into rhymed couplets for the following week. |
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It is written in rhymed tetrameters, the most artless of English metres and quite unlike the majestic blank verse of Prospero the magician. |
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Lefevere, though, very simply overstates the case regarding the relative function and desirability of rhymed, metrical translation. |
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Boccaccio's poem, a pastoral romance in rhymed octaves, has been aptly described as a hymn to nature. |
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Meyer's version employs a spare free verse that is very Ibsenish, even though Ibsen composed here in rhymed octosyllables! |
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They used to offer their supplications before these deities in rhymed prose and sought revelation. |
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While most sonnets conform to the usual rules of prosody, with their decasyllables and 14 rhymed lines, there are exceptions throughout the set. |
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The participant was asked if another word rhymed or sounded like the target word. |
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Employees dubbed it The Room of Doom, just because the two words rhymed, and it sounded threatening. |
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He brought in stacks of plain and emphatically rhymed popular poems copied from newspaper columns and asked us what we thought of them. |
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Crucially, while her written poems rhymed, her BSL translations did not, because BSL differs from English in grammatical structure. |
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The poem was long, compared to most of the Egyptian poems I've read, and rhymed. |
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In the original languages, the ghazal is a highly rhymed form, but the English version as we know it now refuses the rhyming couplet. |
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The Dong Song is a chanted rhymed poem, marked by an abundance of striking metaphors. |
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Weatherford's poems are mostly rhymed and each is accompanied by a striking vintage photo or illustration. |
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Most rap still follows the initial formula of rhymed couplets that casually mix full rhyme with assonance. |
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These include native law texts as well as heroic prose narratives and intricately crafted rhymed verse in hundreds of different meters. |
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His class time was spent with worksheets, circling words that rhymed and identifying letters of the alphabet with memory games. |
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He came to be influenced in this latter pursuit by primitive forms, which rhymed felicitously with those elongated features found in much of his portraiture. |
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All players had to be competent dancers and singers, but dramatists like Marlowe, Shakespeare, and Jonson replaced earlier short, rhymed verse with poetic drama. |
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And that this doesn't hold true in rhymed poetry because rhyme propels us forward, lulling us with the steady clop of iambs? |
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This long sermon in blank verse with key words that rhymed was the thunderclap announcing the birth of a new state. |
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Even in mid winter, the rhymed cone-shaped silhouettes of the deadened inflorescence provide an attractive garden scene. |
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Then, for Obispo the summer of 2000 rhymed with the rehearsals of The Ten Commandments. |
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Both albums are rife with lyrical references to rolling hills, trees, creeks, dirty knees and breezes, and delivered in direct couplets or simply rhymed tercets. |
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His earlier work tends to be written in traditional rhymed quatrains but, as he matured, he dropped the rhymes and worked in a freer but still basically alexandrine movement. |
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Both free verse and rhymed poetry styles are studied, including cinquain, haiku, tanka, rhopalic, echo and refrain poems, acrostics, alphabet and dictionary poems. |
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He tabulated the total number of lines of blank verse, rhymed verse, and prose in each play, along with short and long lines, and lines with redundant syllables. |
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All of them share the same metrics: four different pentasyllabic rhymed verses. |
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In 1924 Phil Stone's financial assistance enabled him to publish The Marble Faun, a pastoral verse-sequence in rhymed octosyllabic couplets. |
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This would not happen if the poem rhymed, but the poem does not rhyme. |
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They found themselves confronting a sterility in literature, with its maniacal emphasis on form, which rhymed with progress and the accelerating emphasis on technology. |
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Most of the poems employ the forms of the sonnet, rhymed couplets, and ballad stanzas, and most were composed while Cullen was an undergraduate at New York University. |
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It was translated into English iambic pentameter with rhymed couplets. |
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No' would have been the simple choice: the answer which rhymed easily with resentment and suited political expediency. |
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She rhymed off at least a dozen different groups that she said had been consulted. |
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I was not present when the committee business you rhymed off, Mr. Chair, was discussed. |
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The recitatives were no longer rhymed, contrary to the arias and recitatives of German opera. |
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I rhymed off a list of the latest recalls of products from China, such as toxic drywall and imported jewellery. |
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Sauter wrote over 300 poems and rhymed storied of the most varying quality. |
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The abandonment of old formulas and standard melodic procedures is nowhere more evident than in the new rhymed Offices of the 12th century and later. |
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In addition to Romanizing the Greek alphabet in this line, Billy Blue, against Greek poetic practice, is given to singing rhymed couplets, with Caribbean accentuation. |
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Moralistic work in rhymed prose and verse. |
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From Ennius to Theroldus, from Theroldus to Casimir Delavigne, all is rhymed prose, a game, the sloppiness and glory of innumerable idiotic generations: Racine is the pure, the strong, the great. |
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A short, rhymed romance recounting a love story, it includes supernatural elements, mythology transformed by medieval chivalry, and the Celtic idea of faerie, the land of enchantment. |
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Adams' poetry is light and conventionally rhymed. |
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I was baffled with the way he historically rhymed off some figures. |
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Beneath the nimble fingers of a brave leader going by the name of Bruno Pitch, this lute of modern times sketches an unusual rhymed and melodic poetry with refreshing harmonies. |
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Includes four simple puzzles where it is possible to touch the texture of a spaceship, a bus, and even a dinosaur! Allow your child to follow the different rhymed sceneries and explore their sense of touch. |
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It is written in alternately rhymed quatrains. |
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Sitting in an armchair beside a blazing fire in a community centre, Mr. Saakashvili rhymed off a list of his government's accomplishments. |
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However, she rhymed off a list of high achievers and well-known personalities who were known to suffer from learning disabilities. |
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Mr. Speaker, I listened to the minister with great interest as he rhymed off figures and facts of what the government has done and what the government has not done. |
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Through the rhymed iambic heptameter, the epithets, and the synecdoches, Hemans transplants American Indian experience from its own cultural ground to English soil. |
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Say, that was quite a list of expenses Heffering rhymed off. |
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The songtexts are in rhymed verses, and each line is repeated once. |
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