different between poetry vs anapestic

poetry

English

Alternative forms

  • poëtry (archaic)

Etymology

From Middle English poetrye, poetrie, a borrowing from Old French pöeterie, pöetrie, from Medieval Latin po?tria, from po?ta (poet), from Ancient Greek ??????? (poi?t?s, poet; author; maker). Displaced native Old English l?oþcræft.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?p???t?i/, [?p????t??]
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?po??t?i/, [?p?o??.?t??i]
  • Hyphenation: po?et?ry

Noun

poetry (usually uncountable, plural poetries)

  1. Literature composed in verse or language exhibiting conscious attention to patterns and rhythm.
    Synonyms: (archaic) poesy, verse
    Antonym: prose
  2. A poet's literary production.
  3. (figuratively) An artistic quality that appeals to or evokes the emotions, in any medium; something having such a quality.

Quotations

  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:poetry.

Derived terms

  • poetry in motion

Related terms

Translations

Anagrams

  • Proyet, Torpey, tropey

poetry From the web:

  • what poetry should i read
  • what poetry book should i read
  • what poetry means to me
  • what poetry did shakespeare write
  • what poetry mean
  • what poetry form is a dream deferred
  • what poetry does for us
  • what poetry teaches us


anapestic

English

Alternative forms

  • anapaestic (UK)
  • anapestick (obsolete)

Etymology

anapest +? -ic

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?æ.n?.?pi?.st?k/

Adjective

anapestic (comparative more anapestic, superlative most anapestic)

  1. of, or relating to, or composed of an anapest.
  2. of, or relating to, one of the distinct beats in a (human?) heartbeat pattern.
  3. of, or relating to, a rhythmic pattern used in certain forms of poetry (see also limeric or limerick).
  4. of, or relating to, certain beats in specific types of drum rhythms, e.g. specific beats within the part played by the "surdo" drum. Surdo literally means "deaf" in Brasilian Portuguese, and the surdo drums play the bass parts in a samba rhythm as performed by a batucada (drumming ensemble) during the Carnaval celebration.

Translations

Noun

anapestic (plural anapestics)

  1. A verse that contains anapestic feet

Anagrams

  • Capetians, antapices, anti-space, antispace, captaines

Romanian

Etymology

From French anapestique, from Latin anapaesticus.

Adjective

anapestic m or n (feminine singular anapestic?, masculine plural anapestici, feminine and neuter plural anapestice)

  1. anapestic

Declension

anapestic From the web:

  • anapestic what does it mean
  • what is anapestic tetrameter
  • what is anapestic trimeter
  • what is anapestic feet
  • what is anapestic beat
  • what does anapestic
  • what is a anapest in literature
  • what is stopped anapestic beat
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