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tribrach
[ trahy-brak, trib-rak ]
noun
- Prosody. a foot of three short syllables.
tribrach
1/ 藞tr瑟b-; 藞tra瑟br忙k /
noun
- prosody a metrical foot of three short syllables ( )
tribrach
2/ 藞迟谤瑟产谤忙办 /
noun
- archaeol a three-armed object, esp a flint implement
Derived Forms
- 迟谤颈藞产谤补肠丑颈肠, adjective
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 迟谤颈路产谤补肠丑顎僫肠 adjective
- 迟谤颈路产谤补肠丑顎僫路补濒 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of tribrach1
Origin of tribrach2
Example Sentences
Tribrach, u u u = n艔b艔dy, hastily pronounced.
Tribrach, a classical foot, 鈼 鈼 鈼, 51.
Classical prosody distinguished several other feet, some of which are occasionally mentioned in treatises on English verse: amphibrach 鈼鈼, tribrach 鈼♀棥鈼, pyrrhic 鈼♀棥, paeon _鈼♀棥鈼, choriamb _鈼♀棥_.
Juno, meantime, whose feelings were less affected, did not kneel at all; but, like a tribrach, amused herself with chasing a hare which just then crossed one of the forest ridings.
In the Latin comic writers, Plautus and Terence, great freedom is permitted, and the various equivalents of the Iambus, viz. the Dactyl, Anapaest, Spondee, Tribrach, Proceleusmatic, are freely admitted in any foot except the last.
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