Hexameter is a style of poetic verse containing six metrical feet.
Hexameter.
Hexameter, the epic verse usually used in classic Greek and Latin literature, consists of six feet, which are made up of spondees or dactyls.
It's not a question in "Polish language or culture". "Hexameter" refers to poetry, "acre" to agriculture. Have you not messed up something?
There are 4 syllables. Hex-am-e-ter.
Eighteen
It is the mania for writing in hexameter.
In poetry, a line length of four feet is known as tetrameter. Other line lengths include: One foot: monometer Two feet: dimeter Three feet: trimeter Five feet: pentameter Six Feet: hexameter Seven feet: heptameter Eight feet: octameter
Hexameter.
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Dactylic hexameter is a form of meter in poetry that consists of six metrical feet per line, with each foot having one long syllable followed by two short syllables. It was commonly used in ancient Greek and Latin epic poetry, including works like Homer's "Iliad" and Virgil's "Aeneid."
hexameter
Ionic: either describing its origin (from Ionia Greece) or its syllable pattern (Ionic is a metrical foot of four syllables, either two long syllables followed by two short syllables (greater Ionic) or two short syllables followed by two long syllables (lesser Ionic))hexameter: A line of verse consisting of six metrical feetNote: Ionic is not to be confused with1) Iambic which is the use of a metrical foot consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable2) Ionic bonding in Chemistry