Octet, octave, ottava all mean 8-line verse or stanza (section of a larger poem). There are also specific types of verse, such as triolet, which is an 8-line poem style from Medieval France in which the last first two lines are repeated at the end and the first line is also repeated in the fourth line. The rhyme scheme for a triolet is always ABAAABAB.
The default term for an eight-line stanza is an octet.
An octet which is rimed ABABABCC is called ottava rima.
Ottava rima was used for several important late Tudor translations (particularly Fairfax' Gierusalemme Liberata) and also for Byron's Don Juan, and several of Yeats' late fantasies (Sailing to Byzantium &c.).
an eight lined poem is an octet :)
Name #2Another name for an eight lined poem is an "octave".Another name for an eight lined poem is "triolet".
oh no i forgot better go to wikiansers
English Tree lined road are usually wide Roads and are called Avenues.
stinkybad verse
A long verse is called an "epos" which is greek for "epic poem."
i think well from what my teacher told me is that there called black verse that's my best guess. Ah-oh-ho! Not "black " verse! It is called "blank" Blank verse is different from free verse. Look at difference. verse!. THere is also "free "verse or u-nrhymed poetry.
a Quatrain
Alameda.
Geode
a sestet.
Natural ones are called orifices. Artificial ones are called stomas.