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A quadruplet is a section in a poem that only has four lines.
If you are asking about an Elizabethan sonnet, it has 3 quatrains (ababcdcdefef) and a rhyming couplet (gg). If you are talking about a Petrarchan sonnet, the first section is called an octave (8 lines interrhymed--abbaabba) and the second section is called a sestet (six lines interrhymed--cdecde).
A stanza of four lines is called a quatrain.
A quatrain is, in poetry, a specific type of poem. There are not many rules to follow, and writing a quatrain is fairly simple. The quatrain contains just four lines. That's it and that's all the rules for writing a quatrain.
They are four lines that coincide pairwise in at least four distinct points.
A square has exactly four lines of symmetry.
If you think about it youwill know.But a Square has four lines of symmetry.
A quatrain is a stanza with four lines.
Four. Qua is a prefix, meaning four.
If by four parallel lines you mean two pairs of parallel lines, then you would be looking for a parallelogram. An example of a parallelogram is at this address:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/41/Parallelogram.svgThe arrowhead lines along the sides designate that the opposite sides are parallel and of the same length. The single and double lines in each section show that the portions of line in each segment are identically sized.
This site doesn't let you use pictures, but I assume you just connect all four lines, since a square has four lines...
four lines