What is another word for couplets?

Pronunciation: [kˈʌpləts] (IPA)

Couplets are an essential aspect of poetry, consisting of two lines that are either rhymed or unrhymed and typically share a common meter. While there aren't necessarily synonyms for couplets, there are many different types of couplets that can be used in poetry. Some common types include heroic couplets, which are rhymed couplets in iambic pentameter, elegiac couplets, which are unrhymed and consist of a dactylic hexameter followed by a pentameter, and closed couplets, which are self-contained and complete in their own right. Other types of couplets include enjambment couplets, where the punctuation in one line flows onto the next, and terza rima, which involves a three-line stanza with a rhyming pattern of ABA, BCB, CDC.

What are the hypernyms for Couplets?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Couplets

The flashlight at intervals, in couplets, seemed to say "Sally" twice when it came, and then to leave a blank for him to think about her in.
"Somehow Good"
William de Morgan
Dr. James H. Breasted, speaking of the Pyramid Texts, in his Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt, says: "Among the oldest literary fragments in the collection are the religious hymns and these exhibit an early poetic form, that of couplets displaying parallelism in arrangement of word, and thought-the form which is familiar to all in the Hebrew Psalms as 'parallelism of members.
"The Literature of Ecstasy"
Albert Mordell
I need not speak of its shortcomings; didactic poetry of that kind is dreary enough, and the smart couplets often offend one's taste.
"English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth Century"
Leslie Stephen

Famous quotes with Couplets

  • Pope abounds in quotable things, chiefly from his habit of making every line rest on its own merits—a circumstance that accounts, in its turn, for the strong resemblance his couplets bear to each other.
    Samuel Laman Blanchard
  • Poetic trifles from solitary rambles whilst chewing the cud of sweet and bitter fancy..now written from memory, confined to fourteen lines, this seemed best adapted to the unity of sentiment, the verse flowed in unpremeditated harmony as my ear directed but are far from being mere elegiac couplets.
    William Lisle Bowles
  • Many years ago in lovely Lindau on the Bodensee, I happened upon a thin volume of Angelus Silesius' couplets which startled, amused and greatly interested me. Although it was in 1657 the world had first received them it seemed to me that they had lost little of their significance in 300 years.
    Angelus Silesius
  • I have had occasion lately to look into Mickle's translation of the Lusiad. It is easily and gracefully versified, but properly speaking is not a translation, but a very free paraphrase, or of the original. I have been amazed to find what long passages of his own the writer has interpolated into the work. He does not even follow the division into stanzas, but recasts the whole into English couplets. This, to me, is a fatal error.
    William Julius Mickle

Related questions:

  • How to write a poem with couplets?
  • What is a couplet?
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