Want this question answered?
Atonic
Second: you pronounce it "ac - cept"
The basic unit used in the measurement of verse is called a foot. A foot typically contains one accented syllable and one or two unaccented syllables, establishing the rhythm and structure of a poetic line. Examples of common feet include iambic (unstressed, stressed) and trochaic (stressed, unstressed).
Yes, "sally" is an iamb because it follows the pattern of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable ("SAL-ly").
Accented syllables are syllables in a word that receive a greater emphasis or stress when spoken. They help determine the rhythm and flow of speech in a language. In English, accented syllables are usually louder, higher in pitch, or longer in duration compared to unaccented syllables.
An iambic foot has an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one.
A metrical FOOT (not a metrical set) is a pattern of accented and unaccented syllables, so false.
An unaccented beat in music is any beat that is not stressed or accented, and often referred to as the "off beat". They are the beats that occur before the first beat of the bar, or before an accented downbeat of the conductor. For example, in 3/4 time, the accented beat is the first beat of each bar and the two beats that follow are unaccented. In 4/4 time, the accented beats are 1 and, to a lesser degree, beat 3, but the unaccented beats, the ones which are not as strong, are beats 2 and 4 in each bar.
dactyl
An amphimacer is a metrical foot consisting of an unaccented syllable between two accented syllables.
An amphimacer is a metrical foot consisting of an unaccented syllable between two accented syllables.
Atonic
An antibacchius is a variety of metrical foot consisting of two accented syllables followed by one unaccented syllable.
The first syllable of creatures is stressed. (kree-chers)
you write a unaccented syllable followed with on accented syllable so it is every other
Rhyme Scheme
That's a dactyl.