masculine and feminine
patterns of syllabic stress
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masculine and feminine
Summary
Key Facts
- masculine and feminine is a type of prosodic unit[1].
- masculine and feminine is part of metrics[2].
- masculine and feminine's described by source is recorded as The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics[3].
- masculine and feminine's described by source is recorded as A Dictionary of Literary Devices: Gradus, A-Z[4].
- masculine and feminine's described by source is recorded as Encyclopædia Britannica Online[5].
- masculine and feminine's described by source is recorded as Oxford Reference[6].
- masculine and feminine's used by is recorded as A Psalm of Life[7].
- masculine and feminine's used by is recorded as Sonnet 20[8].
- masculine and feminine's used by is recorded as The Raven[9].
- masculine and feminine's used by is recorded as Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken[10].
Body
Definition and Type
masculine and feminine is a type of prosodic unit[1].
Use and Application
masculine and feminine is part of metrics[2]. Recorded used by include A Psalm of Life[7], Sonnet 20[8], The Raven[9], and Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken[10].