A caesura
CAESURA
A caesura is a natural pause or break in the middle of a line.
In Anglo-Saxon poetry, a break between every 4 lines is called a caesura; these were used to break poetry into smaller chunks to allow easier memorization, as scops had to memorize epic poems without the use of rhyming in the early centuries.
line of demarcation is an imaginary line running down the middle of the Atlantic from the North Pole to the south. Pope Alexander VI drew it in 1493
the line is called the normal
CAESURA
A caesura is a natural pause or break in the middle of a line.
A caesura is a pause or break in a line of poetry, typically occurring in the middle of a line. It helps to create rhythmic variation and adds emphasis to certain words or phrases.
In Anglo-Saxon poetry, a break between every 4 lines is called a caesura; these were used to break poetry into smaller chunks to allow easier memorization, as scops had to memorize epic poems without the use of rhyming in the early centuries.
The middle of a line segment is called a Midpoint.;-)
You can make a break in the line in HTML by placing in BR tag. It moves whatever is being written to the next line.
Half a line of verse is called a hemistich. A hemistich is a division of a line of poetry into two parts, often creating a pause or a sense of completion within the line.
A caesura is a pause or break in a line of poetry, typically occurring in the middle of a line. It is used to create rhythm, emphasize a point, or allow for a natural pause in the verse.
When the author of a poem continues one line into another without introducing a pause he or she is using enjambment.
It is called an enjambment when a line of a poem continues without a pause into the next line but the sentence or phrase remains uninterrupted.
the legar line
the line that goes through the middle of a leaf is called a vein.