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Acrostic

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About 1 pages (98 words)
Acrostic Summary

Originally, a short verse composition, constructed so that one or more sets of letters (such as the initial, middle, or final letters of the lines), taken consecutively, form words. An acrostic in which the initial letters form the alphabet is called an abecedarius.

Ancient Greek and Latin writers, medieval monks, and Renaissance poets are among those who devised acrostics. Today the term is used for a type of word puzzle utilizing the acrostic principle. A popular form is double acrostics, puzzles constructed so that the middle or last, as well as initial, letters of lines may form words.

This is the complete article, containing 98 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Acrostic
    . Verbal play in which initial or individual letters, taken in order, form a word or phrase—c... more

    Acrostic
    See also poetry, verse This describes a poem or puzzle where the first letter of each line, read se... more


     
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    Acrostic from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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