isosyllabic
Traditionally, English poets employ iambic pentameter when writing sonnets, but not all English sonnets have the same metrical structure: the first sonnet in Sir Philip Sidney's sequence Astrophel and Stella, for example, has 12 syllables: it is iambic hexameters, albeit with a turned first foot in several lines. In the Romance languages, the hendecasyllable and Alexandrine are the most widely used metres.
The word "temporary" has the same number of syllables as "stationary," which is four.
No, the lines in a sonnet typically have the same number of stressed syllables as other forms of poetry, such as iambic pentameter. The rhyme scheme and structure of a sonnet are what differentiate it from other forms of poetry.
The duration of And the Same to You is 1.17 hours.
The duration of Same Same but Different is 1.77 hours.
The duration of Same Name is 3600.0 seconds.
There is one syllable in the word same.
The duration of Same Old Song is 2 hours.
The duration of Under the Same Skin is 2.08 hours.
The duration of It's the Same World is 1200.0 seconds.
All lines are not the same length in a limerick poem. To be a limerick, the first, second, and fifth lines have three metrical feet and lines three and four have two metrical feet. Also, the endings of lines one, two, and five rhyme, and the endings of lines three and four rhyme.
School is one syllable. It would be written the same if showing syllables.