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What is a stanza break?

What is a stanza break?

A stanza is a group of lines within a poem; the blank line between stanzas is known as a stanza break. A stanza is a group of lines within a poem; the blank line between stanzas is known as a stanza break.

Can a stanza have 1 line?

The monostich is a stanza—a whole poem—consisting of just one line. After that, there is the couplet (two-line stanza), tercet (three-line stanza), quatrain (four-line), quintet (five-line), sestet (six-line), septet (seven-line), and octave (eight-line).

What do you call a stanza with 5 lines?

A quintain (also known as a quintet) is any poetic form or stanza that contains five lines. Quintain poems can contain any line length or meter.

What do you call a stanza with 7 lines?

A 7-line stanza of any kind is called a septet. The most common such form, and apparently the only one to have a special name, is rhyme royal, which uses the scheme ababbcc, the lines having 10 syllables each i.e. (usually) iambic pentameter. Rhyme royal is also sometimes known as the Troilus stanza.

What is a 9 line stanza called?

Spenserian stanza

What is a 3 line poem called?

tercet

What is the line of the poem?

A line is a unit of language into which a poem or play is divided. The use of a line operates on principles which are distinct from and not necessarily coincident with grammatical structures, such as the sentence or single clauses in sentences.

What do you call the first line of a poem?

| Certified Educator. The word stich, pronounced like “stick,” is the word that describes one line of poetry (plural is stichs, pronounced like “sticks”). The word verse can refer to one line of poetry as well, as in a poetic verse, but it can just as often refer to a poem in its entirety.

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Ruth Doyle