- a consonant). At the end of a line, the "e"
remains unelided but is
hypermetrical (outside the
count of syllables, like a
feminine ending in
English verse)...
- is the
reference of the
track title).
Their releases "Positron" and "
Hypermetrical"
became also well
known hits of the genre.
Several years later, "The...
- endings. To this
schema Milton introduced modifications,
which included hypermetrical syllables (trisyllabic feet),
inversion or
slighting of stresses, and...
-
University Press. ISBN 0-19-511785-9. Krebs,
Harald (2005). "Hypermeter and
Hypermetric Irregularity in the
Songs of
Josephine Lang.". In
Deborah Stein (ed.)...
-
amphibrach is also
often used in
ballads and
light verse, such as the
hypermetrical lines of Sir John Betjeman's poem "Meditation on the A30" (1966). Amphibrachs...
-
Problems with DNA SCA1 (ATXN1) 4th
decade (<10 to >60) 15
years (10–35)
Hypermetric saccades, slow saccades,
upper motor neuron (note:
saccades relates to...
- 97. Cook 1993b, p. 30 Cohn,
Richard L. (1992). "The
Dramatization of
Hypermetric Conflicts in the
Scherzo of Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony". 19th-Century...
-
expected to
introduce a new
speaker and seem
redundant (as well as
hypermetrical) in the m****cript version. Alternatively, De Boor
would place the lines...
- (1942), The
Rhythm of Beowulf: an
interpretation of the
normal and
hypermetric verse-forms in Old
English poetry, Yale
University Press. Powell, K....
- as a consonant). When it
falls at the end of a line, the mute "e" is
hypermetrical (outside the
count of syllables).
Polish syllabic verse is
similar to...