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Prosody

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About 1 pages (100 words)
Prosody (linguistics) Summary

Study of the elements of language, especially metre, that contribute to rhythmic and acoustic effects in poetry.

The basis of “traditional” prosody in English is the classification of verse according to the syllable stress of its lines. Effects such as rhyme scheme, alliteration, and assonance further influence a poem's “sound meaning.” Nonmetrical prosodic study is sometimes applied to modern poetry, and visual prosody is used when verse is “shaped” by its typographical arrangement. Prosody also involves examining the subtleties of a poem's rhythm, its “flow,” the historical period to which it belongs, the poetic genre, and the poet's individual style.

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    Prosodic
    adj. 1. Narrowly, pertaining to distinctions of prominence in speech, particularly as realized phon... more

    Prosodic Domain
    n. Any unit of phonological structure larger than a single segment, such as a syllable, a word or a... more


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

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