ode
== == None of these below!! brode, grode, knode, moede, mowed, towed, rhode, thode, abode, erode It is an epode - a type of lyric poem composed of couplets in which a long line is followed by a shorter one.
No, only the beginning letter of each new line is capitalized.
Yes, kind of, but it is mostly the most read (sung) word.
The likely word is the proper noun "Iliad" (an ancient lyric poem attributed to Homer).
Poems that go down with a word that they are describing are called acrostic poems. Each letter in the word serves as the beginning of a line in the poem, with the entire word spelled out vertically.
As. The shortest word beginning with the letter a is "a"
Yes, "lyric" can refer to a single set of words in a song or poem (singular) or to multiple sets of words (plural). For example, "The lyric of this song is beautiful" (singular) and "The lyrics of these songs are catchy" (plural).
Much of the poetry of John Keats is found in the form of an ode.An ode is a lyric poem.
Lyrics in Arabic is قصيدة من الشعر الغنائي and that mean in English "Singing Poem from Verse"
An example of a poem where the first letter of each line spells out a word is an acrostic poem. In an acrostic poem, the first letter of each line combines to spell out a word, message, or name when read vertically.
"Apple" is a word that starts with the letter A for use in an acrostic poem.
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