end-rhymed
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Adjective:
- Having rhyme occurring on the terminal syllables of lines of verse: The word "end-rhymed" describes a poetic structure where the final syllables of lines rhyme with each other. This is the most common and recognizable form of rhyme in poetry.
Usage
- Adjective:
- The term is used to classify or describe poetry, verses, or lines where the rhyme occurs at the end.
- It is typically used in literary analysis and discussion of poetic form.
Examples
- Adjective:
- The poem is written in a simple, end-rhymed couplet pattern.
- Traditional sonnets are usually end-rhymed.
- While modern poetry often uses free verse, she prefers the musicality of end-rhymed stanzas.
Advanced Usage
- Technical Literary Analysis: The term is used to contrast with other rhyme schemes like internal rhyme (where rhyme occurs within a single line) or beginning rhyme.
- The shift from end-rhymed quatrains to unrhymed lines marks a turning point in the poem's tone.
Variants and Related Words
- End rhyme (n): The rhyme itself that occurs at the end of lines of poetry.
- The poet's use of end rhyme creates a rhythmic and memorable quality.
- Rhyme (n/v): The correspondence of sound between words or the endings of words.
- Internal rhyme (n): Rhyme that occurs within a single line of verse.
Synonyms
- Terminally rhymed: A less common synonym with the same meaning.
- Having terminal rhyme: A descriptive phrase meaning the same as "end-rhymed."
Antonyms
- Unrhymed: Having no rhyme.
- Free verse: Poetry that does not use consistent meter patterns, rhyme, or any other musical pattern. It may lack end rhyme.
- Using internal rhyme: Having rhyme primarily within lines rather than at their ends.
Adjective
- rhymed on the terminal syllables of the verses