pentameter
iambic pentameter
"Ode to a Nightingale" by John Keats is written in iambic pentameter, a poetic meter consisting of lines with ten syllables each where the stress falls on every second syllable.
The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is written in iambic pentameter, a meter consisting of ten syllables per line divided into five pairs of stressed and unstressed syllables.
A square meter contains ten thousand square centimeters inside of it, or one million of square milimeters.
A ten-syllable verse with alternating stressed and unstressed syllables is called an iambic pentameter. This rhythmic pattern is commonly found in traditional English poetry, such as Shakespearean sonnets and blank verse.
Almost all of Shakespeare's sonnets are in Iambic Pentameter (lines of ten syllables with stress on each even-number beat). Sonnet 130 most certainly is: my MIStress' EYES are NOTHing LIKE the SUN
"Deca-" = ten Decasyllabic = ten syllables example = disestablishmentarianism
Lis-ten-ing (3) syllables
There are 2 syllables. Kit-ten.
The word tenant has two syllables. The syllables are ten-ant.
There are two syllables. Writ-ten.
There are 3 syllables. At-ten-tive.