The poem "Harlem (Dream Deferred)" by Langston Hughes uses a free verse form, rather than a specific stanza structure. This free verse form gives the poem a sense of fluidity and allows Hughes to explore the central idea of a deferred dream in a more open and flexible way.
Octave
a simile used in the poem "Dream Deferred" it is used like this: when you have a dream in life, and you cannot get it, you give up on it and then you dont remember it, just like when you put a raisin in the sun it will dry up,, and you will not remember it after some time, and you will give up on your dream.
A Burns stanza is a variety of stanza used in Standard Habble verse.
A deferred driver is a listed driver who has a policy elsewhere and therefore is not used in the rating of the policy from which they are listed as deferred.
Deferred int expenses is a term used in accounting for business and finance. It is used to refer to the interest on loans and payments, which is considered an expense that is deferred, or expected to be paid at a later date.
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"Deferred" is often used in medical terms, as in "the vaginal exam was deferred."
A sestina is a type of poem that repeats the same six words in each stanza in a specific pattern to create complexity and depth. The six words, known as "teleutons," are typically used at the end of lines in each stanza and are rotated in a set order throughout the poem.
The first and last stanzas of "Eros Turannos" from "The Man Against the Sky" by Edwin Arlington Robinson are written in an eight-line stanza called an octet. This stanza form is commonly used in the Petrarchan or Italian sonnet.
In "Let America Be America Again" by Langston Hughes, one notable stanza is: "Let America be America again. / Let it be the dream it used to be." This stanza captures the poem's overarching theme of longing for an idealized America that lives up to its promises of freedom and equality. Hughes uses this refrain to express disillusionment with the reality of American life for marginalized groups.
An octet is used to represent an eight line stanza. However it is also called an octave when used in a Sonnet as the first eight lines.
The poem "An Hymn to the Morning" by Phillis Wheatley utilizes a rhymed quatrain stanza form, with each stanza consisting of four lines.