tetrameter
Scansion.
The metrical feet in Poe's "Annabel Lee" are predominantly iambic. The poem is written in a unique metrical pattern called trochaic tetrameter, with four trochees in each line. This creates a steady rhythm and musical quality to the poem.
A line with four feet is known as tetrameter in poetry. This refers to having four metrical feet per line. Shakespeare's plays and some poems consist of lines in tetrameter.
A bimeter is a setting of a musical meter against another, or a poetic meter in which each line has two metrical feet.
Octameter
A pentameter is a line of verse consisting of five metrical feet. Each foot typically has two syllables, making a total of ten syllables per line.
A limerick typically consists of five lines of verse. The rhyme scheme is usually AABBA, with lines 1, 2, and 5 containing three metrical feet and lines 3 and 4 containing two metrical feet.
A pentameter is a unit of poetic meter containing five metrical feet. It does not have a fixed length in kilometers, as it is a unit used in poetry to describe the rhythm of a line of verse, not a unit of distance like kilometers.
Sentence: His witty sayings are versifications of his own jokes.
the rhythmic pattern of a poetic line.
Hexameter is a style of poetic verse containing six metrical feet.
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.