The quick brown tomatuh jumped over the lousy potatuh. - so says Dopey Slim.
It's really called a "Weggie"
ragtime
It is called "Rescued!!" by Abraham Lass and is available from the iTunes Store.
A "rag" is short for "ragtime," which in turn was short for "ragged time," because the syncopation characteristic of ragtime sounded "ragged" to listeners in those days.
A website called MuseScore has the sheet music, and even a played clip.
Ragtime music started in the late 1800's, but did not become widely popular until the 1900's.Ragtime became popular from 1870's and until now.Scott Joplin made the ragtime music by the song called "Entertainer".
One stressed syllable followed by two unstressed is called a dactyl, and a line of verse written in that style is called dactyllic. Here are the other kinds of metrical feet as well: iamb: unstressed, stressed trochee: stressed, unstressed dactyl: stressed, unstressed, unstressed anapest: unstressed, unstressed, stressed amphibrach: unstressed, stressed, unstressed amphimacer: stressed, unstressed, stressed bacchius: unstressed, stressed, stressed antibacchius: stressed, unstressed, unstressed pyrrhus: unstressed, unstressed spondee: stressed, stressed tribrach: unstressed, unstressed, unstressed molossus: stressed, stressed, stressed
Meter organizes stressed and unstressed sounds into measures.
ragtime
A pattern of stressed and unstressed sounds in language is called rhythm. This rhythmic pattern is created by organizing syllables into stressed (accented) and unstressed (unaccented) beats. It helps to create a natural flow and musicality in speech.
It is called "Rescued!!" by Abraham Lass and is available from the iTunes Store.
The term is called "syncope." It refers to the omission of an unstressed syllable within a metrical line of poetry.
I believe that it was called a Peabody
fantique fatigue
Pan-Africanism
That is called meter, which helps to create rhythm and structure in poetry. The most common meters in English poetry are iambic (unstressed-stressed) and trochaic (stressed-unstressed).
A "rag" is short for "ragtime," which in turn was short for "ragged time," because the syncopation characteristic of ragtime sounded "ragged" to listeners in those days.
Stressed and unstressed elements in a poem are called meter, specifically the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables that create the rhythmic structure of a poem. This rhythmic pattern is known as the poem's meter, with common examples including iambic pentameter or trochaic tetrameter.