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Two successive lines of verse
Answer for the clue "Two successive lines of verse ", 7 letters:
couplet
Alternative clues for the word couplet
Word definitions for couplet in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1570s, in poetry, from French couplet (mid-14c.), a diminutive of couple (see couple (n.)). In music, from 1876.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Couplet \Coup"let\ (-l?t), n. [F. couplet, dim. of couple. See Couple , n. ] Two taken together; a pair or couple; especially two lines of verse that rhyme with each other. A sudden couplet rushes on your mind. --Crabbe.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES heroic couplet rhyming couplets (= pairs of lines that end in words that rhyme ) ▪ The song has rhyming couplets . EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ a rhymed couplet EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But how can I explain these allusions ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
In Chinese poetry , a couplet is a pair of lines of poetry which adhere to certain rules (see below). Outside of poems, they are usually seen on the sides of doors leading to people's homes or as hanging scrolls in an interior. Although often called antithetical ...
Usage examples of couplet.
The couplets that wormed their way into my consciousness most avidly, and stuck most securely, were on the earliest tracks she played.
Margaret found herself recalling the intricate rhymed couplets of Zeepangu.
The wits used to say that Ropers,-- the poet once before referred to, old Samuel Ropers, author of the Pleasures of Memory and giver of famous breakfasts,--was accustomed to have straw laid before the house whenever he had just given birth to a couplet.
Couplets of Horseclans Law only insist that tanist, chief and subchiefs of a clan be of blood relationship.
Poutrincourt and Champlain, returning wounded and weather-beaten from inspecting the coast of New England, to find the buildings of Port Royal, under Lescarbot's care, bright with lights, and an improvised arch bearing the arms of Poutrincourt and De Monts, to be received by Neptune, who, accompanied by a retinue of Tritons, declaimed Alexandrine couplets of praise and welcome, and to sit at the sumptuous table of the Order of Good Times, of which I have just spoken, furnished by this same lawyerpoet's agricultural industry.
The Englishman, pleased with my reasoning, wrote down the following old couplet, and gave it to me to read: 'Dicite, grammatici, cur mascula nomina cunnus, Et cur femineum mentula nomen habet.
She cried a couplet in anapaestic monometer with implied rhyme: "There are stars In my shoe.
While he came on with slow steps, the astrologist said, “Unfortunately, there is still another pertinent couplet.
A grade-school couplet comes to mind: Mother gives me lemonade, around the corner fudge is made.
From The Couplets of the Law Aldora had come to the stream to wash the pouch which one of her master's wives had given her the week before and to change its stuffing of the dry moss that had received her body's discharges.
Couplet, "triginta hominum spontanea morte placari manes concubinæ, ritu apud Sinas execrando, quem barbarum morem successor deinde sustulit.
Altho' the last couplet was generally suppressed, so evident was its partial tone towards me, in the midst of it all I could not help being highly amused with the simplicity evinced by the good people of France, who, in censuring the king's conduct, found nothing reprehensible but his having omitted to select his mistress from elevated rank.
This work consists of fourteen lines of iambic pentameter, incorporating allusions to the Heisman Trophy and Hertz Rent-a-Car, and ends with the prosodically unimpeachable couplet "He's learned the cruelest lesson of them all—/ Celebrity does not prevent a fall.
Notice that there is no rhymed couplet at the end, as is found in Shakespearean and Wordsworthian sonnets.