Haiku
haiku
Feet, in poetry, are the patterns of stress in the syllables used. For example, a foot can be:- an iamb, which is a short syllable followed by a long one (de-dum), or a trochee, which is a long syllable followed by a short one (dum-de), or an amphibrach, which is a long syllable between two short ones ((de-dum-de), or a number of other combinations that each have their own names.
Haiku expresses a moment in time instead of an idea. It can be used to describe a scene in a few short syllables.
The type and number of feet in a line of poetry constitutes itsmeter(apex)
In Hindi grammar, "chhand" refers to the metrical patterns used in poetry. There are seven basic types of chhand: Gayatri, Tri-shtubh, Anushtubh, Jagati, Trishtubh, Ushnik, and Pankti. Each type has a specific number of syllables per line and a specific pattern of long and short syllables. For example, Gayatri chhand has 24 syllables arranged in three lines of 8 syllables each.
lyric.
A ten-syllable verse with alternating stressed and unstressed syllables is called an iambic pentameter. This rhythmic pattern is commonly found in traditional English poetry, such as Shakespearean sonnets and blank verse.
A 10-syllable line made up of unstressed foot - stressed foot pairs is called iambic pentameter and is the most common metric pattern in English poetry. "When I have fears that I may cease to be"
It depends on what type of poem you are using because japanese would write haikus and get translated into english and lose some syllables.
Narrative poetry.
A short, image-based poem, defined by the number of syllables
The type of poetry Shakespeare was famous for was Sonnets