Chercher
ii...
Context, Social Groups and Environmental Issues
iii...
Distribution et communication
iv...
Formes, modes et sous-genres textuels
- Trouvé au paragraphe 1: (...) “versification” or “prosody.” Given that “verse (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 2: (...) of poetry, such as “prosody” (Greek prosodia, o (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 3: (...) cally broader than “metre”, since it covers p (...)
- Trouvé dans le titre 3: (...) Metre (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 4: (...) uccinctly. That is, metre is the series of ru (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 5: (...) one hand (syllabic metre) and systems based (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 6: (...) -Latin models, line metres can be classified (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 7: (...) al features, poetic metre is not an instance (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 8: (...) ived from the word “metre” is used to describ (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 9: (...) d in mostly stichic metres (κατὰ στίχον, katà (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 10: (...) Within it, a word’s prosody may be affected by (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 11: (...) ence exists between metre and syntax. Most pr (...)
- Trouvé dans le titre 6: (...) Metre in Greek and Roman (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 15: (...) h rhythm and poetic metre: the opposition bet (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 19: (...) s employ particular metres depending on wheth (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 20: (...) ). This panhellenic metre is used in the enti (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 23: (...) ontext), only Greek metres are used and adapt (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 25: (...) of Classical Latin metres. While the corresp (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 27: (...) ptation of Germanic metres to the influence o (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 28: (...) ges, the concept of metre applied to a single (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 38: (...) ned organisation of metres and rhymes in genr (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 39: (...) nres, the different metres may also indicate (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 40: (...) arrangement of the metres of the genre (song (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 44: (...) evival of classical metres began from the 16t (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 45: (...) the popular romance metre, made up of pairs o (...)
- Trouvé dans le titre 8: (...) Rhythm and metre in English (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 47: (...) particular foot or metre that is prevalent i (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 49: (...) ry, too, rhythm and metre are interconnected. (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 50: (...) Metre is the central stru (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 51: (...) Since metre, in its regularity, (...)
- Trouvé dans le titre 9: (...) velopment of German metre (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 55: (...) in the alliterating metre in the few remnants (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 56: (...) ent types of poetic metre from about thirty p (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 57: (...) accentual-syllabic metre. The ancient Gallo- (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 62: (...) ly flexible kind of metre used in non-lyrical (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 63: (...) extend traditional metres by more flexible r (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 66: (...) theories of poetic metre striving to correla (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 68: (...) tich: Pentameter)
prosody
Ital. & Span.: (...)
- Trouvé ici 2: (...) 026. "IV.1. Rhythm, Metre, Line." In Poetry i (...)
- Trouvé dans la bibliographie / webliographie
- Trouvé au paragraphe 1: (...) res as line length, prosody, use of multimedia (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 41: (...) forms of rhyme and metre (Rhythm, Metre, Lin (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 49: (...) “in which different metres and themes coexist (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 55: (...) ategories of verse, metre, and rhyme were usu (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 56: (...) iction of verse and metre, as in Aloysius de (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 57: (...) ree verse à rhythm, metre, line), and prose p (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 67: (...) cal poetry (Rhythm, Metre, Line), came to be (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 70: (...) erse poetry (Rhyme, Metre, Line). But more ge (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 76: (...) l verse systems and metres, as well as all ge (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 77: (...) syllabic, and tonic metres (Rhythm, Metre, Li (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 79: (...) of modern poetry is metre-less, rhymeless, an (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 88: (...) lang and creating a prosody consisting of stagg (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 89: (...) tained conventional metre and stanzaic forms, (...)
- Trouvé au paragraphe 92: (...) etric form (Rhythm, Metre, Line) as well as s (...)