different between poem vs sestina

poem

English

Alternative forms

  • poëm (rare or archaic)
  • poeme (rare or archaic)

Etymology

From Middle French poème, from Latin po?ma, from Ancient Greek ?????? (poí?ma), from ????? (poié?, I make). Displaced native Old English l?oþ.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?p????m/, [?p?????m]
  • (US) IPA(key): /?po???m/, /po??m/, [?p?o(??)?m], [?p?o(??)m?], [?p?o(??)m]
  • (India) IPA(key): /?po???m/, [?po(??)?m]
  • (Malaysia) IPA(key): /poj?m/
  • Rhymes: -???m, -??m

Noun

poem (plural poems)

  1. A literary piece written in verse.
  2. A piece of writing in the tradition of poetry, an instance of poetry.
  3. A piece of poetic writing, that is with an intensity or depth of expression or inspiration greater than is usual in prose.

Holonyms

  • poetry

Derived terms

Related terms

  • poet
  • poetic
  • poetics
  • poetry

Translations

Further reading

  • poem in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • poem in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • poem at OneLook Dictionary Search

Anagrams

  • mope, pome

Scots

Etymology

From Middle French poème, from Latin po?ma, from Ancient Greek ?????? (poí?ma), from ????? (poié?, I make).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [pom], [po?m]

Noun

poem (plural poems)

  1. poem
    • 1985, John J. Graham, "E Wir ain aald language. Writin ida Shetland dialect", in Manfred Görlach, Focus on Scotland, John Benjamins Publishing Company, page 193.
      Hit wisna till weel trowe da nineteent century at Shetlanders tried der haand at writin ida dialect — maistly poems, wi a antrin story noo an dan.
    • 1991, Chapman, No. 67-70, page 36.
      And Hugh MacDiarmid was and is A Brawli Makar, for as siccan folk hand tae 't as thrugaun as a poem itsel, he daes, an daes he no.
    • 2000, Chapman, No. 95-97, page 64.
      The pseudonym TSL first thocht on uisin stertin oot ti publish his wark wis Thrawn, an he uised this for whit we think micht be his first published poem in a Sooth African paper at haes (for nou) hidden itsel ower again amang the files.

Swedish

Etymology

From Middle French poème, from Latin po?ma, from Ancient Greek ?????? (poí?ma), from ????? (poié?, I make).

Noun

poem n

  1. poem

Declension


Vilamovian

Noun

poem n

  1. poem

poem From the web:

  • what poem does ponyboy recite
  • what poem has 14 lines
  • what poem made poe famous
  • what poems did homer write
  • what poems did shakespeare write
  • what poem did montag read
  • what poems did langston hughes write


sestina

English

Etymology

From Italian sestina. Doublet of sextain.

Noun

sestina (plural sestinas)

  1. (poetry) A highly structured poem consisting of six six-line stanzas followed by a tercet or envoy, for a total of thirty-nine lines.
    Coordinate terms: pentina, triolet
    • 2002, Annie Finch, Kathrine Varnes, An Exaltation of Forms: Contemporary Poets Celebrate the Diversity of Their Art, University of Michigan Press (?ISBN), page 290:
      Although the sestina is of medieval French origin, attributed to Arnaut Daniel in the late twelfth century and used by other Gallic poets and by Italians including Petrarch and Dante (from whom it received its Italian name), []
  2. (music) A chord comprising the first six members of the harmonic series.

Related terms

  • sestine
  • sextain

Translations

Further reading

  • sestina on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Eastins, Saintes, Setians, Staines, entasis, nasties, tansies, tisanes

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?s?sti?na]

Noun

sestina f

  1. (poetry) sestina

Declension

Further reading

  • sestina in P?íru?ní slovník jazyka ?eského, 1935–1957
  • sestina in Slovník spisovného jazyka ?eského, 1960–1971, 1989
  • sestina in Kartotéka Novo?eského lexikálního archivu

Italian

Etymology

From sesto (sixth).

Noun

sestina f (plural sestine)

  1. (poetry) A six-line stanza, sestet, sestina, sextain
  2. (music) sextuplet

Descendants

  • ? English: sestina

Related terms

  • sei

Anagrams

  • assenti, assentì, intessa, issante, sensati

sestina From the web:

  • sestina meaning
  • sestina what does it mean
  • what is sestina poem
  • what is sestina by elizabeth bishop about
  • what are sestinas usually about
  • what is sestina form
  • what is sestina in english
  • what is sestina all about
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