You described an acrostic poem.
Acronym
It is called an acronym.
I believe it is called a backronym. acronymThe word you're looking for might also be mnemonic.
first of all it is spelled "definition" and it is a formal passage describing the meaning of a term (a word or phrase).
John Adams
John Adams
Merry Christmas
"around the rock" the=article, rock=noun. It's called a prepositional phrase because the first word in the phrase is a preposition. It's called a preposition because it comes before(pre) the position (the rock). Reread that until you understand it.
The first letter of a word is the initial.
The Chinese are a rejected child affair with the orients. The nature of this phrase plays into the history of china and their dislike for female children. It is a metaphor describing how they have fallen out of favor.
No, it's the opposite. An iambic phrase is when the second syllable is stressed, not the first. "Pushy people" is trochee (also called choree) poetic meter, in which the first of two syllables is stressed.
A - The first letter of an eight letter word meaning wealthy is "A" for affluent.W - If it is a crossword puzzle, it could also be the word phrase "well-to-do."