The extra lines in the middle of a semibreve (whole note) are called "ledger lines." Ledger lines are used in musical notation to extend the staff for notes that fall above or below the regular staff lines. They provide a way to notate pitches that are outside the range of the standard staff, enabling musicians to read and interpret a wider variety of notes.
Oh, dude, a nine-line poem is called a nonet. It's like a sonnet, but with less commitment. So, if you're feeling poetic but not ready to commit to those extra three lines, go for a nonet.
Brevity is the soul of wit
what is a 5-line stanza
A nine-line poem is technically called a nonet, but the scarcity of the form means that the word is very rarely used, or found.Most poems set in nine-line stanzas follow the pattern of Sir Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene: eight lines in iambic pentameter, followed by a ninth line set in iambic hexameter (the extra foot, as well as the 12-syllable line itself, is called an Alexandrine.)The usual rhyme scheme for such a stanza is A-B-A-B-B-C-B-C-C. The form is popular enough to have acquired its own term: a Spenserian stanza.
sestet.
hang
The middle of a line segment is called a Midpoint.;-)
the legar line
the line that goes through the middle of a leaf is called a vein.
The imaginary horizontal line that goes around the middle of the earth is called the equator.
An equator
Equator :)
A break or pause in the middle of a line, often marked with punctuation, is called a caesura.
midpoint
its called thee diameter
A caesura
scratch