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Definition of unrhymed in English: unrhymedadjective ʌnˈrʌɪmdˌənˈraɪmd Without rhymes; not rhymed. 不押韵的,无韵的 Example sentencesExamples - From Wintering Out through North, Heaney had normally used an unrhymed quatrain with short lines of irregular metre.
- O'Hara has divided the poem into four unrhymed quatrains, with each of first three consisting of one self-contained sentence.
- Fear and desire come together powerfully in ‘Newsreel,’ a poem of unrhymed tercets set in a 1950s Texas drive-in filled with ‘Cathedral-like De Sotos and great-finned Pontiacs.’
- Sole's unrhymed verse gets a little tedious after 17 tracks.
- Much of this poetry fell squarely in the northern European tradition, and the literary revival of the north-west and the Midlands in the fourteenth century was mainly of alliterative, unrhymed verse.
- Our hearing is indissolubly wedded to five-beat Shakespearean blank verse, usually unrhymed iambic pentameter.
- His translations are unrhymed, elegant, and lucid; his use of stressed and unstressed syllables had, he believed, something in common with G. M. Hopkins's sprung rhythm.
- Rucellai's famous formal innovation is likewise significant here, for his is one of the earliest and most influential examples of versi sciolti, or unrhymed hendecasyllabic verse.
- It's a strange, Verve-like moment of violin tremolo and stylized country made all the stranger by Toomey's lyrics, unrhymed, articulate and serious.
- My friend Phil Proctor just sent along a poem that I much enjoyed, ‘Forgetfulness,’ by Billy Collins - and I rarely enjoy unrhymed poems.
- His popularity in his lifetime rested on being able to use him as a stick with which to beat intellectuals, unrhymed poets and contemporary architects.
- Haiku, meaning a Japanese verse of three short, unrhymed lines, is an entirely appropriate title for Songdog's second album.
- I was writing unrhymed sonnets - the arbitrariness of the form, however vestigial, as a container.
- He uses short unrhymed lines and colloquial phrases like ‘furniture gone wrong’ to portray the distinct voice of this locale.
- Probably indebted in its basic structure - its long, irregular, unrhymed lines and its dignified but casual language - to the example of Walt Whitman, the poem sounded a note previously unheard in African American poetry.
- In taut, unrhymed triplets Pavlic demonstrates his deep appreciation for and understanding of the Black music continuum.
- The trained memory is an impressive and admirable resource, but I doubt its techniques could catch the uncodified, non-systematic subtleties of our unrhymed interchanges as they happen, unedited, moment by moment.
- The poem in the voice of Czar Nicholas, is written in the simple language and direct address of a son's letter to his mother, formed in unrhymed two-line stanzas.
- Built from five unrhymed couplets, the poem is a ladder up the page, suggesting that the ladder is a metaphor for the poem itself.
- Haiku is unrhymed Japanese poetry consisting of 17 syllables, usually written in 3 lines of five, seven, and five syllables, respectively.
Definition of unrhymed in US English: unrhymedadjectiveˌənˈraɪmdˌənˈrīmd Without rhymes; not rhymed. 不押韵的,无韵的 Example sentencesExamples - From Wintering Out through North, Heaney had normally used an unrhymed quatrain with short lines of irregular metre.
- Fear and desire come together powerfully in ‘Newsreel,’ a poem of unrhymed tercets set in a 1950s Texas drive-in filled with ‘Cathedral-like De Sotos and great-finned Pontiacs.’
- Haiku, meaning a Japanese verse of three short, unrhymed lines, is an entirely appropriate title for Songdog's second album.
- Haiku is unrhymed Japanese poetry consisting of 17 syllables, usually written in 3 lines of five, seven, and five syllables, respectively.
- Sole's unrhymed verse gets a little tedious after 17 tracks.
- Much of this poetry fell squarely in the northern European tradition, and the literary revival of the north-west and the Midlands in the fourteenth century was mainly of alliterative, unrhymed verse.
- Rucellai's famous formal innovation is likewise significant here, for his is one of the earliest and most influential examples of versi sciolti, or unrhymed hendecasyllabic verse.
- Our hearing is indissolubly wedded to five-beat Shakespearean blank verse, usually unrhymed iambic pentameter.
- The poem in the voice of Czar Nicholas, is written in the simple language and direct address of a son's letter to his mother, formed in unrhymed two-line stanzas.
- Built from five unrhymed couplets, the poem is a ladder up the page, suggesting that the ladder is a metaphor for the poem itself.
- In taut, unrhymed triplets Pavlic demonstrates his deep appreciation for and understanding of the Black music continuum.
- His translations are unrhymed, elegant, and lucid; his use of stressed and unstressed syllables had, he believed, something in common with G. M. Hopkins's sprung rhythm.
- He uses short unrhymed lines and colloquial phrases like ‘furniture gone wrong’ to portray the distinct voice of this locale.
- Probably indebted in its basic structure - its long, irregular, unrhymed lines and its dignified but casual language - to the example of Walt Whitman, the poem sounded a note previously unheard in African American poetry.
- O'Hara has divided the poem into four unrhymed quatrains, with each of first three consisting of one self-contained sentence.
- His popularity in his lifetime rested on being able to use him as a stick with which to beat intellectuals, unrhymed poets and contemporary architects.
- My friend Phil Proctor just sent along a poem that I much enjoyed, ‘Forgetfulness,’ by Billy Collins - and I rarely enjoy unrhymed poems.
- It's a strange, Verve-like moment of violin tremolo and stylized country made all the stranger by Toomey's lyrics, unrhymed, articulate and serious.
- The trained memory is an impressive and admirable resource, but I doubt its techniques could catch the uncodified, non-systematic subtleties of our unrhymed interchanges as they happen, unedited, moment by moment.
- I was writing unrhymed sonnets - the arbitrariness of the form, however vestigial, as a container.
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