Alcaic
[æl'keiik]
解釋/意思:
(noun.) verse in the meter used in Greek and Latin poetry consisting of strophes of 4 tetrametric lines; reputedly invented by Alcaeus.
凯西整理--From WordNet
解釋/意思:
(a.) Pertaining to Alcaeus, a lyric poet of Mitylene, about 6000 b. c.
(n.) A kind of verse, so called from Alcaeus. One variety consists of five feet, a spondee or iambic, an iambic, a long syllable, and two dactyls.
編輯:特鲁迪
解釋/意思:
adj. of or pertaining to the Greek lyrical poet Alc鎢s (c. 600 B.C.) or to the kind of verse invented by him. The most common form consists of an anacrusis a trochee a spondee and two dactyls; a second of a catalectic iambic pentameter the third foot always being a spondee; a third of two dactyls followed by two trochees. The most common arrangement was two lines of (1) followed by one of (2) and one of (3). Cf. Tennyson's 'O mighty-mouth'd inventor of harmonies.'
手打:罗谢尔