No
Yes, verse and stanza are basically the same thing.
yes it is
Well, it depends on what kind of verse you are talking about. One definition of verse is a line of poetry. Using that definition, then no. A stanza is a group of lines, not just one. If you mean a verse of a song, then it could be, but it often is not. A stanza is a group of lines in a poem. Translating a poem into a song sometimes works out so that a stanza is one verse, but sometimes it is two stanzas per verse, or even more.
I had the same qustion for school. A staza of a poem or hymn is a verse. pretty simple : P , Allie
An Alexandrian stanza is a stanza which when read forward, backward, or across, it still spell the same thing.
stanza??
A Burns stanza is a variety of stanza used in Standard Habble verse.
The lines of a poem which group together are called a verse, a stanza, or a strophe. A poem can have verses, the same as a song can: stanza and strophe are just other words for 'verse'.
There is no fixed amount. Stanza is just another word for verse.
A piece from a poem is called a stanza. Each stanza consists of a group of lines that form a verse within a poem.
A stanza or paragraph
Yes, Emily Dickinson is known for her use of free verse in her poetry. She often wrote without regular rhyme or meter, allowing her lines to flow more freely and express her emotions and thoughts in a unique way.