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Here is a 4 line, 2 stanza poem about my favorite person with rhyme and meter:
My loving sister so dear
With laughter and smile so cheer
Her kindness knows no end
My best friend and confidant
Through good times and also bad
Together we've always had
Each other to rely upon
You're truly the one I'm most fond of
Here is a 4 line, 2 stanza poem about my favorite person with rhyme and meter:
My loving sister so dear
With laughter and smile so cheer
Her kindness knows no end
My best friend and confidant
Through good times and also bad
Together we've always had
Each other to rely upon
You're truly the one I'm most fond of
Here is a 4 line, 2 stanza poem about my favorite person with rhyme and meter:
My loving sister so dear
With laughter and smile so cheer
Her kindness knows no end
My best friend and confidant
Through good times and also bad
Together we've always had
Each other to rely upon
You're truly the one I'm most fond of
meter, rhyme schemes, rhetorical figures and other sound devices is just a important in the writing of poetry as the use of imagery, metaphor and the other kinds of tropes, since poetry shares a lot of characteristics with music. Rhythm is an inherent or essential quality of life and the natural world. Rhythm is an inherent or essential quality of life and the natural world. the repeating recurrence of birth, growth, and death in the life of a family or clan; the ups and downs transpiring within the duration of a year; the alternating occurrence of joy and sorrow, hope and despair, anger and forgiveness, frustration and fulfillment, doubt and certainty, solitude and soliditary, sickness and health, plenitude and poverty; and the constant throbbing of the heart. Nature, too, has its own rhythmic patterns: in the west, the changing of the seasons from spring to summer to autumn to winter, in the Orient, the the dry and wet seasons; as well as the staccato sound of falling rain, a rushing river, the ebb and flow of the sea, among others. In poetry, rhythm refers to the variation or alternation of strong and weak (stressed and unstressed) syllables or elements in the flow of speech. The term “rhythm” is a derivative of the Greek word rhythmos which means “measured motion.” In most poetry written before the twentieth century, rhythm was often expressed in regular, metrical forms; in prose and in free verse. In poetry, meter is defined as the regular recurrence or repetition of rhythmic patterns, or the rhythm established by the consistent occurrence of similar units of sounds. There are four basic types of meters or rhythmic patterns: (1) quantitative or classical meter, in which the rhythm is produced by recurring patterns of long and short syllables; (2) accentual or sprung rhythm, in which the rhythmic pattern is established by the presence of a syllable marked by a strong stress or accent regardless of the number of unstressed or unaccented syllables surrounding the stressed or accented syllable; (3) syllabic, in which the rhythmic pattern is created by the fixed number of syllable in a line even if the occurrence of the accent may vary; 4) accentual-syllabic, in which the rhythmic pattern is formed both by the fixed or nearly fixed number of accents and syllables per line. In poetry written in English, the fixed poetic forms, like the sonnet and the villanelle, deploy the accentual- syllabic meter. The foot is the basic rhythmic unit within the line of poetry. In English accentual-syllabic verse, there are six commonly used metrical feet: (1) iambic, (2) trochaic, (3) anapestic, (4) dactyli, (5) spondaic, and (6) pyrrhic. Iambic pattern 1 unstressed syllable followed by 1 stressed syllable.(-/) EXAMPLE: repose-(re-POSE) belief-(beLIEF) Complete-(comPLETE) Trochaic pattern 1 stressed syllable followed by 1 unstressed syllable. EXAMPLE: garland-(GAR-lang) speaking-(SPEAK-ing) value-(VAL-ue) Anapestic pattern 2 unstressed syllables followed by 1 stressed syllable. EXAMPLE: Interupt (in-ter-rupt) Unbridged contradict engineer Masquerade, Galilee Dactylic pattern 1 stressed syllable followed by 2 unstressed syllables. EXAMPLE: Happiness (HAP-pi-ness) Galloping (GAL-lop-ing) Fortunate, Saturday, murmuring Spondaic pattern All syllables have equal stressed EXAMPLE: Heartbreak Out, out...” “pen-knife,” “heartburn” Pyrrhic pattern Combination of 2 unstressed sllables. EXAMPLE: “dada” Combination of Poetic Feet One foot per line: monometer Two foot per line: dimeter Three foot per line: trimester Four foot per line: tetrameter Five foot per line: pentameter Six foot per line: hexameter 1 unstressed + stressed Answer: Iambic Dimeter 1 unstressed + 1 stressed Answer: Iambic Trimeter Scan the following common English words below and determine their respective metrical feet. Write “iamb” if the word is iambic, “trochee” if the word is trochaic, “anapest” if the word is anapestic, “dactyl” if the word is dactylic or “spondee” if the word is spondaic. 1. understand _____________________________ 2. heartbreak _____________________________ 3. roses _____________________________ 4. inspire _____________________________ 5. mannequin _____________________________ 6. childhood _____________________________ 7. planet _____________________________ 8. contradict _____________________________ 9. buffalo _____________________________ 10. behold _____________________________ Write a poem with rhyme and meter. (4 lines and 2 stanza) The topic is about your favorite person.