| Poetry Meters/Rhythms | Definitions | Example |
| anapest | two unaccented syllables or words followed by an accented syllable. | Ex. "And the peak of the mountain was apples" "magazine" |
| Burns metre | Scottish poetry meter consisting of six lines with rhyme aaabab | |
| dactyl | long vowel syllable followed by two short vowel syllables in word or phrase. Word:poetry; Phrase:This is the forest primeval. | |
| dimeter | verse with two metrical feet | Ex. "and stoop and drink and bathe my wings" |
| foot/feet | repeated pattern(s) or arrangements of stressed and unstressed syllables | |
| heptameter | a line of verse having seven foot | |
| hexameter | a six foot line of verse | Ex. "this is the/ forest pri/ meval the/ murmuring/ pines and the/ hemlocks |
| iambic | a metrical foot consisting of one short syllable (Classical verse) or one unstressed syllable (English verse) followed by one long unstressed syllable. | |
| octave | term used to describe a poem that consists of eight words or syllables. | |
| ottava rima | an iambic pentameter scheme abababcc | |
| pentameter | five foot verse | |
| quintilla | Spanish poetry a 5 line stanza with eight syllable lines and one of four rhyme schemes: ababa; abbab; abaab; or aabba. | |
| rime royal | an iambic pentameter scheme ababbcc | |
| sestet | a poem or stanza of six lines, most often the second part of a sonnet | |
| spondaic/spondee | a metrical foot of two long syllables | Ex. "I mean taste, sight, smell…" |
| tetrameter | a line of verse having four feet. | E."Whose woods these are I think I know |
| trimeter | a line of verse having three feet | Ex, alone/ he rides/ alone |
| trochaic/trachee | a foot of two syllables of which the first is long or stressed and the second short or unstressed. | Ex."why so pale and wan" |
See Also: Poetry Forms
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