Chaucer
To whom it may concern: Hello and bye.
Miranda took a bitter pill today.
The word decasyllabic itself has only five syllables, though a decasyllabic word would have ten syllables.
10
A decasyllabic is a line of verse containing ten syllables. It is a common form in poetry, with many traditional forms such as blank verse, heroic couplets, and sonnets being structured around lines of ten syllables.
5 dec a·syl·lab ic
That's not a thing. But a ten-syllable word might be considered decasyllabic.
"Deca-" = ten Decasyllabic = ten syllables example = disestablishmentarianism
A decasyllabic line consists of ten syllables, typically following a specific rhythmic pattern. In English poetry, this often aligns with iambic pentameter, where each line alternates unstressed and stressed syllables. An example of a decasyllabic line is "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" from Shakespeare's Sonnet 18.
I sometimes wonder who is worthy here.
A sonnet with 10 syllables in each line is typically referred to as a decasyllabic sonnet. It is a specific form of the sonnet that follows a strict meter and rhyme scheme.
I sometimes wonder who is worthy here. -APEX
They use slant and rhymes
Blank verse is one of the most popular forms of English poetry. It is formed by using unrhyming Iambic pentameter lines. This simply means that each line of the poem must contain 10 syllables, and they do not rhyme. Shakespeare used this form of verse often.