enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Alliterative verse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliterative_verse

    Alliterative verse was so strongly entrenched in Old English society that English monks, writing in Latin, would sometimes create Latin approximations to alliterative verse. [ 82 ] Types of Old English alliterative verse

  3. Alliteration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliteration

    Alliteration is used in the alliterative verse of Old English poems like Beowulf, Middle English poems like Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Old Norse works like the Poetic Edda, and in Old High German, Old Saxon, and Old Irish. [3] It was also used as an ornament to suggest connections between ideas in classical Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit poetry.

  4. Metre (poetry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metre_(poetry)

    The alliterative verse found in Old English, Middle English, and some modern English poems can be added to this list, as it operates on somewhat different principles than accentual verse. Alliterative verse pairs two phrases (half-lines) joined by alliteration; while there are usually two stresses per half-line, variations in the number of ...

  5. Poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry

    Alliteration is the repetition of letters or letter-sounds at the beginning of two or more words immediately succeeding each other, or at short intervals; or the recurrence of the same letter in accented parts of words. Alliteration and assonance played a key role in structuring early Germanic, Norse and Old English forms of poetry.

  6. Old English metre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English_metre

    Just using a basic understanding of the alliterative verse can give a clue as to what the word might be. The type lines are also used to determine the lost words if only one or two words are missing, and the place of the alliterator and the stressed syllables is known.

  7. Portal:Poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Poetry

    These include consonance (or just alliteration), assonance (as in the dróttkvætt), and rhyme schemes (patterns in rimes, a type of phoneme group). Poetic structures may even be semantic (e.g. the volta required in a Petrachan sonnet). Most written poems are formatted in verse: a series or stack of lines on a

  8. Old English literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English_literature

    The most distinguishing feature of Old English poetry is its alliterative verse style. The Anglo-Latin verse tradition in early medieval England was accompanied by discourses on Latin prosody, which were 'rules' or guidance for writers. The rules of Old English verse are understood only through modern analysis of the extant texts.

  9. Alliteration (Latin) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliteration_(Latin)

    The same author's Canticum Amōris is a shorter poem written in alliterative verse. [142] At about the same time as Richard Rolle wrote this, an Alliterative Revival also began in English poetry, and in the same part of England.