- - Poetic pattern found four times in "'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house"
- - Standard part of a limerick
- - One of four in "'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house"
- - Bit of a limerick
- - Type of foot
- - Relative of a dactyl.
- - Reverse of a dactyl.
- - Meter of "I am monarch of all I survey."
- - Foot of poetic meter.
- - Meter in which "A Visit From St. Nicholas" is written.
- - Metrical foot of three syllables.
- - Foot of three syllables.
- - Type of verse
- - Two short syllables followed by a long one, poetically
- - Three-syllable limerick foot
- - Three-syllable foot
- - Three-syllable foot, as in 'bada-bing'
- - Three-syllable poetic foot
- - "Au revoir," for example
- - Three-part foot
- - Three-syllable foot, in poetry
- - "In the Mood," e.g.
- - Three-syllable foot whose last syllable is stressed
- - Pattern in prosody
- - "Underneath," metrically
- - Short, short, long
- - Poet's three-syllable foot
- - Limerick foot
- - Foot for Swinburne
- - Dactyl's relative
- - 2 short, 1 long, in poetry.
- - Reversed dactyl.
- - A trisyllable metrical foot.
- - Metrical foot, two short and one long.
- - Metrical foot
- - Poetic foot
- - Poet's foot
- - Foot for Frost
- - Metric foot
- - Poetic measure
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