you write a unaccented syllable followed with on accented syllable so it is every other
Think about what you wish for. Write it down. Form it poetically.
To write meter in short form, use a combination of letters and numbers that represent the type and number of feet in a line of poetry. For example, "iambic pentameter" can be abbreviated as "iamb. pent." where "iamb" signifies the foot and "pent" denotes five feet. Common abbreviations include "iamb" for iambic, "troch" for trochaic, "anap" for anapestic, and "dact" for dactylic. Additionally, you can indicate the number of feet with terms like "tetrameter" (four feet) or "hexameter" (six feet).
Is underneath an iamb
It is a poem which tells you that you can't write a poem. :)
Research Uriah Butler and then incorporate the interesting details in poetic form into your poem.
In the same way that you'd write any poem; by paying attention to form, metre and rhyming scheme as you formulate what you need to say. or Let our parting be like that of virtuous men and their souls
The word joanne is an iamb.
I don't think it would matter to you, considering you seem to be struggling pretty hard already with English by the looks of your question.
A poem is a poem, you can't get more than that. But the answer to that is very simple. It comes from your heart, everything does. So just think of it and when it's ready, you'll have the words. :)
they can write a haiku or a shape poem
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.
Yes, destroy is an iamb, de = not stressed, stroy = stressed.