No it's an anapest.
The anapest.
In that order, that's an anapest.
A foot.
trochee
That makes up a kind of metrical foot.
True. The metrical structure of a poem refers to the rhythmic pattern created by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables in each line of the poem.
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
The term for a metrical foot with one stressed and one unstressed syllable is an iamb. Each pair of syllables in the word "again" is an example of an iamb: a-GAIN.
meter
anapest
A type of metrical foot is the iamb, which consists of two syllables: the first is unstressed and the second is stressed (da-DUM). Iambs are commonly used in English poetry, particularly in iambic pentameter, which features five iambs per line. Other types of metrical feet include trochees, anapests, and dactyls, each with different patterns of stressed and unstressed syllables.
anapest