Ares hohen
The verse commun is, besides the silver of the eighth century, and the Alexandrian, which dominates from the 16th to the beginning of the nineteenth century, the most widely used verse in French. The verse commun is a ten-syllable verse, according to the rules of the French doctrine, which does not include elevations or syllable lengths, but the number of syllables to the last accented syllable. The last emphasized syllable in the so-called "feminine" conclusion still contains an unaccented eleventh syllable , Which, however, is not counted and is muted in New French. In addition to the number of syllables, the verse commune characterizes a certain handling of the caesura, which as a rule is after the fourth, and, exceptionally, after the sixth syllable, and distinguishes it from other or freer forms of the tensilber.