PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «DIPODIC»
dipodic
dipodic
define
group
feet
especially
accentual
verse
which
accented
syllables
bears
primary
stress
other
secondary
poetry
foundation
steve
broached
subject
close
heart
meter
thought
might
deserve
little
space
here
harriet
what
defined
yourdictionary
prosody
metrical
unit
consisting
origin
dipody
late
latin
dipodia
from
classical
greek
twice
pous
podos
foot
related
forms
wiktionary
comparable
retrieved
http
index
title=dipodic
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «DIPODIC»
Scopri l'uso di
dipodic nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
dipodic e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
Modern metrical technique: as illustrated by ballad meter ...
There are many 'gradations of stress, but these are not arranged with the
regularity and simplicity necessary to make them rhythmically perceptible to the
reader.1 In distinction from simple verse the dipodic form involves a quantltae tive
as well ...
George Rippey Stewart, 1922
2
English Historical Metrics
The problem with a dipodic reading of ME alliterative metre is that the familiar
dipodic metres are regularly dipodic - as in nursery rhymes ('Pease porridge hot')
and in verse by Rudyard Kipling, W.S.Gilbert, and fohn Masefield. The
regularities ...
C. B. McCully, J. J. Anderson, 1996
3
Memory in Oral Traditions: The Cognitive Psychology of Epic, ...
Dipodic meter implies 16 syllables per couplet line for long meter and 14 for
common meter. Ballads have a freer form (Leech, 1969, p. 118). For instance, the
first eight couplet lines (i.e., four stanzas) of the variant of Lord Thomas and Fair ...
4
Memory in Oral Traditions : The Cognitive Psychology of ...
Dipodic meter implies 16 syllables per couplet line for long meter and 14 for
common meter. Ballads have a freer form (Leech, 1969, p. 118). For instance, the
first eight couplet lines (i.e. , four stanzas) of the variant of Lord Thomas and Fair
...
David C. Rubin Professor of Psychology Duke University, 1995
5
The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics: Fourth Edition
M. Winkler DIPODISM, DIPODIC VERSE. Dipody (literally, two-footed) has been
used to describe () a metrical unit larger than the *foot, () a kind of *meter, and
() a rhythmic tendency. This line by John Masefield (“A Ballad of John Silver”) ...
Stephen Cushman, Clare Cavanagh, Jahan Ramazani, 2012
6
The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics
M. Winkler DIPODISM, DIPODIC VERSE. Dipody (literally, two-footed) has been
used to describe () a metrical unit larger than the *foot, () a kind of *meter, and
() a rhythmic tendency. This line by John Masefield (“A Ballad of John Silver”) ...
Roland Greene, Stephen Cushman, Clare Cavanagh, 2012
7
The Passion of Meter: A Study of Wordsworth's Metrical Art
This is evident, for example, in the tendency of lines of four-beat popular verse
and song to fall into dipodic rhythm. In dipodic verse or song, strong syllables in
contiguous binary units (or "feet") are themselves read in relation to one another,
...
That its identity with the age-old dipodic measures of English poetry has not been
widely understood is due partly to the poet's own contradictory utterances, partly
to the somewhat primitive state of metrical knowledge in his own time, partly to ...
9
Meter in English: A Critical Engagement
That distinction is the basis of dipodic verse — another metrical system poorly
explained and skimpily documented in prosodic literature. Dipodic verse sets up
three levels of accent — strong stress, secondary stress, and no stress.
dipody, dipodic verse from “installations of interactive media art,” “computer- and
net-based art,” and “explicitly from literary traditions.” Janez Strehovec claims that
digi- tal poetry is “a new genre all of its own,” which incorporates “kinetic/ani- ...