- Found in paragraph 5: (...) the second-to last stanza Larkin suspects poe (...)
- Found in paragraph 6: (...) ation. In the final stanza, he expresses the n (...)
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3 articles with
stanza
ii Context, Social Groups and Environmental Issues
iv Textual Forms, Modes, and Subgenres
- Found in paragraph 4: (...) eet, line or verse, stanza, poem), underlie a (...)
- Found in paragraph 6: (...) being ‘unrhymed’). Stanzas are basically clas (...)
- Found in paragraph 8: (...) pplied to a text or stanza with a regular stru (...)
- Found in paragraph 9: (...) s, or, rarely, for “stanza”. Similar to Latin (...)
- Found in paragraph 10: (...) Lines (as well as stanzas and strophes) are (...)
- Found in paragraph 22: (...) lcaeus, uses simple stanzas of 2–4 periods. Th (...)
- Found in paragraph 37: (...) r the didactic, the stanza for the lyric (the (...)
- Found in paragraph 41: (...) The stanza of a lyric song is (...)
- Found in paragraph 55: (...) ex heterometric ode stanzas in German and thus (...)
- Found in paragraph 56: (...) e (Chinese and Thai stanzaic poetry). (...)
- Found in paragraph 60: (...) is undoubtedly the stanzaic sonnet. It is con (...)
- Found in paragraph 62: (...) he. Beyond avoiding stanzaic form, rhyme and r (...)
- Found in paragraph 68: (...) pondeus, Spondäus stanza (see also distich, c (...)
- Found in paragraph 67: (...) he heterometric ode stanza, closely modelled o (...)
- Found in paragraph 83: (...) osed in sonnet-like stanzas. (...)
- Found in paragraph 84: (...) city. His free-form stanzas are typical, with (...)
- Found in paragraph 89: (...) ventional metre and stanzaic forms, while crea (...)
