Definition of Hendecasyllabic. Meaning of Hendecasyllabic. Synonyms of Hendecasyllabic

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Hendecasyllabic. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Hendecasyllabic and, of course, Hendecasyllabic synonyms and on the right images related to the word Hendecasyllabic.

Definition of Hendecasyllabic

Hendecasyllabic
Hendecasyllabic Hen*dec`a*syl*lab"ic, a. Pertaining to a line of eleven syllables.

Meaning of Hendecasyllabic from wikipedia

- In poetry, a hendecasyllable (as an adjective, hendecasyllabic) is a line of eleven syllables. The term may refer to several different poetic meters,...
- The original Italian sonnet form consists of a total of fourteen hendecasyllabic lines in two parts, the first part being an octave and the second being...
- Gaius Valerius Catullus (c. 84 BC – c. 54 BC). The poem, written in a hendecasyllabic (11-syllable) meter, was considered to be so ****ually explicit following...
- Catullus 6 is a Latin poem of seventeen lines in Phalaecean hendecasyllabic metre by the Roman poet Catullus. Flavius is teased about an intrigue which...
- a translation. His poems are written in a variety of meters, with hendecasyllabic verse and elegiac couplets being the most common by far. Catullus is...
- kisses, with a touch of stellar voyeurism. The meter of this poem is hendecasyllabic, a common form in Catullus' poetry. There are several mythological...
- their lengths. Additionally, the verse scheme used, terza rima, is hendecasyllabic (lines of eleven syllables), with the lines composing tercets according...
- known as the Aeolics: Glyconic (the most basic form of Aeolic line), hendecasyllabic verse, Sapphic stanza, and Alcaic stanza (the latter two are respectively...
- Alighieri for his narrative poem the Divine Comedy, which he set in hendecasyllabic lines. In English, poets often use iambic pentameter. Terza rima is...
- of Neoteric poetry in the Latin language. The meter of this poem is hendecasyllabic, a common form in Catullus's poetry. ^ "To unfold the entire age in...