POETRY vs VERSE: NOUN
- A 'poetical' quality, artistic and/or artfull, which appeals or stirs the imagination, in any medium
- Literature in metrical form
- Composition in verse or language exhibiting conscious attention to patterns.
- The class of literature comprising poems.
- Imaginative language or composition, whether expressed rhythmically or in prose. Specifically: Metrical composition; verse; rhyme; poems collectively
- The art of apprehending and interpreting ideas by the faculty of imagination; the art of idealizing in thought and in expression.
- Composition in verse; a metrical composition; verse; poems: as, heroic poetry; lyric or dramatic poetry; a collection of poetry.
- An imaginative, artistic, and metrical collocation of words so marshaled and attuned as to excite or control the imagination and the emotions; the language of the imagination or emotions metrically expressed.
- That one of the fine arts which addresses itself to the feelings and the imagination by the instrumentality of musical and moving words; the art which has for its object the exciting of intellectual pleasure by means of vivid, imaginative, passionate, and inspiriting language, usually though not necessarily arranged in the form of measured verse or numbers.
- A quality that suggests poetry, as in grace, beauty, or harmony.
- The essence or characteristic quality of a poem.
- Prose that resembles a poem in some respect, as in vivid imagery or rhythmic sound.
- Literature written in meter; verse.
- The poetic works of a given author, group, nation, or kind.
- Poems regarded as forming a division of literature.
- The act or practice of composing poems.
- Any communication resembling poetry in beauty or the evocation of feeling
- A poet's literary production
- A piece of poetry
- A line of metrical text
- Literature in metrical form
- A single metrical line in a poetic composition; one line of poetry.
- A division of a metrical composition, such as a stanza of a poem or hymn.
- Metrical or rhymed composition as distinct from prose; poetry.
- The art or work of a poet.
- A group of poems.
- Metrical writing that lacks depth or artistic merit.
- A poem.
- A portion of an anthem to be performed by a single voice to each part.
- One of the short divisions of the chapters in the Old and New Testaments.
- A stanza; a stave.
- A short division of any composition.
- Metrical arrangement and language; that which is composed in metrical form; versification; poetry.
- A line consisting of a certain number of metrical feet (see foot, n., 9) disposed according to metrical rules.
- A particular type of metrical composition, such as blank verse or free verse.
- A similar division in any book.
- A short division of a chapter in any book of Scripture, usually forming one sentence, or part of a long sentence or period.
- In church music, a passage or movement for a single voice or for soloists, as contrasted with chorus; also, a soloist who sings such a passage
- Poetry in which the lines do not end in rhymes.
- See under Heroic.
- A poetic form with regular meter and a fixed rhyme scheme.
- Poetic form in general.
- One of several similar units of a song, consisting of several lines, generally rhymed.
- A succession of words written in one line; hence, a sentence, or part of a sentence, written, or fitted to be written, as one line; a Stich or stichos.
- Metrical composition in general; versification; hence, poetical composition; poetry, especially as involving metrical form: opposed to prose.
- A specimen of metrical composition; a piece of poetry; a poem.
- A type of metrical composition, represented by a group of lines; a kind of stanza: as, Spencerian verse; hence, a stanza: as, the first verse of a (rimed) hymn.
- In prosody: A succession of feet (colon or period) written or printed in one line; a line: as, a poem of three hundred verses; hence, a type of metrical composition, as represented by a metrical line; a meter. A verse may be catalectic, dimeter, trimeter, iambic, dactylic, rimed, unrimed, alliterative, etc.
- A small section of the Jewish or Christian Bible.
- One of the numbered subdivisions of a chapter in the Bible.
- Hence— In liturgies, a sentence, or part of a sentence, usually from the Scriptures, especially from the Book of Psalms, said alternately by an officiant or leader and the choir or people: specifically, the sentence, clause, or phrase said by the officiant or leader, as distinguished from the response of the choir or congregation; a versicle.
POETRY vs VERSE: VERB
- N/A
- Familiarize through thorough study or experience
- Compose verses or put into verse
- To compose verses.
- To educate about, to teach about.
- To oppose, to be an opponent for, as in a game, contest or battle.
POETRY vs VERSE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To make verses; to versify.
POETRY vs VERSE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To play against (an opponent) in a competition.
- To familiarize by study or experience.
- To tell in verse, or poetry.
POETRY vs VERSE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To turn; revolve, as in meditation.
- To relate or express in verse; turn into verse or rime.
- To make verses.
- In heraldry, reversed or turned in a direction unusual to the bearing in question. Also renverse.
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To versify or engage in versifying.
POETRY vs VERSE: RELATED WORDS
- Hair, Lint, Shar, Felt, Shih, Shi, Miscellany, Muse, Writing, Poetic, Poem, Poets, Poet, Poesy, Verse
- Letter, Sentence, Stanza, Chorus, Bible, Text, Limerick, Couplet, Poem, Poetize, Versify, Verse line, Poesy, Rhyme, Poetry
POETRY vs VERSE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Prose, Notice, Hair, Shar, Felt, Shih, Shi, Miscellany, Muse, Writing, Poetic, Poem, Poet, Poesy, Verse
- Line, Letter, Sentence, Stanza, Chorus, Bible, Text, Limerick, Couplet, Poem, Versify, Poetize, Poesy, Rhyme, Poetry
POETRY vs VERSE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Dramatic poetry combines the principles of epic and lyric poetry.
- Poetry Notes Poetry is the most compact form of literature.
- Poetry Poetry may seem dry as dirt in a drought.
- Common Core Poetry Guides and Poetry Lesson Plans Help students dig deeper into poetry and satisfy common core requirements.
- We celebrated National Poetry Day yesterday in style with the launch of a Poetry writing competition through the National Poetry Day campaign.
- Offers the chance to read widely in contemporary American poetry and develop reflective prose essays on poetry, poetics, and the philosophy of poetry.
- See more ideas about poetry terms, poetry worksheets, poetry ideas.
- Since the days of epic poetry, poets have used sonnets, free verse, villanelles, slam poetry, short poems, and even instagram poetry to describe love.
- INTERACTIVE POETRY UNITThe perfect poetry unit to turn middle school students on to poetry.
- Her poetry has won several awards and has been published by Quill Press, World of Poetry, Great Lakes Poetry Press, and Sparrow Grass Poetry.
- Victorian verse, who helped initiate the writing of free verse among English speaking poets.
- For the sake of clarity we will deal with this passage verse by verse.
- List Poem or Catalogue Verse and in the verse form of a Curtal Sonnet.
- In poetry, such wordplay has also been described as snowball verse and wedge verse.
- There is also a Bible memory verse that goes along with each verse.
- What i have written in violates blank verse n free verse both.
- Bible, dealing with the scriptural texts, many times, verse by verse.
- Explains difficult words and syntax, verse by verse.
- Verse by Verse: The Old Testament is now available.
- Scripture verse by verse website my name is Michael.
POETRY vs VERSE: QUESTIONS
- Why did Zhadan compare his poetry to Pavlo Tychyna's poetry?
- How is narrative poetry different from other forms of poetry?
- How can online poetry courses improve your poetry writing skills?
- What makes slam poetry different from traditional poetry?
- Can poetry de-stigmatize mental health through poetry?
- Is the winter poetry by William Shakespeare pastoral poetry?
- When did Arcadia Poetry Press publish American poetry anthology?
- When is John Keats'poetry poetry life&landscapes published?
- What poetry shows more appeared in poetry magazine correspondence?
- Why is Roman poetry so different from Latin poetry?
- What happened to Dailyhunt parent verse innovations?
- Is the MÅ«l Mantar the full verse or the first verse?
- What is the first free verse poem written in free verse?
- What is an advanced cassette copy of Nirvana's verse chorus verse?
- What is the transition from verse 10 to verse 11 in Amos?
- What are the drawbacks of Beale's verse by verse commentary?
- Is Zoroaster's on virtue of stones in verse or verse?
- What are the differences between free verse and rhymed verse?
- How are stanzas different in formal verse and free verse?
- Is there a connection between verse 12 and verse 16?