blank verse

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blank verse

A poet writes a line of blank verse in a notebook.

Definition

Noun: * Unrhymed verse (usually in iambic pentameter): A type of poetry that has a regular meter, most commonly iambic pentameter (five iambs per line, where an iamb is an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one), but does not use a rhyme scheme.

Usage
  • Blank verse is a formal and flexible poetic structure, often used for dramatic and narrative poetry because its lack of rhyme can sound more like natural speech.
  • It is frequently employed in English literature for plays and long poems.
Examples
  • Much of William Shakespeare's plays, like and , are written in blank verse.
  • John Milton's epic poem is composed in blank verse.
  • The poet chose blank verse for the monologue to give it a dignified yet conversational tone.
Advanced Usage
  • "To write in blank verse": To compose poetry using this specific metrical but unrhymed form.
    • The playwright decided to write the entire soliloquy in blank verse.
Variants and Related Words
  • Free verse (n): Poetry that does not use a consistent meter or rhyme scheme. (This is distinct from blank verse, which has a regular meter).
  • Iambic pentameter (n): The specific metrical pattern of a line with five iambs, which is the most common meter for blank verse in English.
Synonyms
  • Unrhymed iambic pentameter
  • Unrhymed verse
Related Phrases
  • "A line of blank verse": A single metrical line from a blank verse poem.
    • She analyzed the iambic pattern in a line of blank verse.
blank verse

A poet writes a line of blank verse in a notebook.

Noun
  1. unrhymed verse (usually in iambic pentameter)