Nghĩa của từ dactyl|dactyls bằng Tiếng Anh

noun

[dac·tyl || 'dæktɪl]

division of poetry containing an accented syllable before two unaccented syllables

Đặt câu với từ "dactyl|dactyls"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "dactyl|dactyls", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ dactyl|dactyls, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ dactyl|dactyls trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh

1. Lexicographical has this great pattern: it's called a double dactyl.

2. Amphibrachs do not mix well with dactyls or Anapests…

3. The other feet are: trochees, Anapests, dactyls, and spondees

4. Nonsubjective bahaism protelytropterous magnific`entness unnethes Arriding almah adjudger lehrsmen^ unselfrel~~iant dactyl autocoprophago

5. The small differences indicate that the space weathering process is less active on Dactyl.

6. A "dactylic" line may feature dactyls, Anapests, or spondees, because these are all equal (L + s + s)

7. What does Alcaic-verse mean? A Greek meter, supposedly invented by Alcaeus; consisting of combinations of spondee, iambs and dactyls

8. Next to a dactyl or anapest, an Amphibrach will typically be perceived as an iamb (or trochee) plus an unrhythmical short syllable

9. The Anapaest (‘an uh ,pest) and the dactyl (‘dact ul) are each a foot consisting of three syllables

10. But a line with iambs and trochees cannot feature dactyls or Anapests, and vice versa, because they are not equal in length

11. Even the pronunciation given clearly shows the stress on the first syllable, making it a dactyl, not an Anapaest.

12. It appears similar to other members of the portunid family, but has reduced swimming dactyls and long walking legs.

13. Anapests are rare in spoken English, and in English-language poetry Anapests are far less common than dactyls, iambs, and trochees.

14. ‘Thus in the last stanza quoted, after the surge of Anapaests in the first two lines, spondees, dactyls, and iambs begin to appear.’

15. List of words with A, C, D, L and Y: yclad, acidly, acidyl, CalDyn, Clardy, clayed, dactyl, deacyl, diacyl, ycladd, Acidyls, acridly, adactyl, ad-hocly, alcayde

16. Thus, if Johnson say, in one sentence, that 'English names should not be used in Latin verses;' and then, in the next sentence, speak Blamingly of 'Carteret being used as a dactyl,' will the

17. See Anapaest ‘But the repetition of ‘call to me’ in its dactylic form makes a continuous Anapaestic reading impossible, and the stress dactyls in the following lines makes it clearly inappropriate.’

18. Mixing Iambs and Anapests (and also Trochees and Dactyls) works really well in a story because, as in the lines above, a reader never really notices (unless they are specifically looking) if there are one or two UNstressed syllables in between the STRESSED ones.

19. Anapaest , anapest n (Prosody) a metrical foot of three syllables, the first two short, the last long (<Anapaest>) (C17: via Latin from Greek anapaistos reversed (that is, a dactyl reversed), from anapaiein, from ana- back + paiein to strike) ♦ Anapaestic, anapestic adj

20. ‘Thus in the last stanza quoted, after the surge of Anapaests in the first two lines, spondees, dactyls, and iambs begin to appear.’ More example sentences ‘They seemed startled by the realization they could actually craft iamb, anapest, anapest, and have it come out a poem.’

21. Each line of a poem contains a certain number of feet of iambs, trochees, spondees, dactyls or Anapests. A line of one foot is a monometer, 2 feet is a dimeter, and so on--trimeter (3), tetrameter (4), pentameter (5), hexameter (6), heptameter (7), and o ctameter (8)

22. The Amphibrach, laid out on this scheme, would coincide with the dactyl, as there are but three possible zones for foot elements: the zone of the limiting sensation (always occupied by the accented syllable), the zone of the contraction phase (occupied by the unaccented syllables of the iamb and anapæst), and the zone of the relaxation phase

23. From the base of New Latin Artiodactyla, division of ungulates, from Greek ártios "right, fitting, even (of numbers)" (derivative from árti "just now," arti- "fitting, correct") + -o- -o- + New Latin -dactyla, neuter plural of -dactylus "having digits (of the kind specified)," borrowed from Greek -daktylos, adjective derivative of dáktylos "finger, toe" — more at art entry 1, dactyl