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decasyllable
[ dek-uh-sil-uh-buhl ]
decasyllable
/ ˌdɛkəsɪˈlæbɪk; ˈdɛkəˌsɪləbəl /
noun
- a word or line of verse consisting of ten syllables
Derived Forms
- decasyllabic, adjective
Other Words From
- non·deca·sylla·ble noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of decasyllable1
Example Sentences
The shorter length of the decasyllable line is not altogether a disadvantage to the translator.
It was the beginning of a revolution, which Ferreira completed by abandoning the hendecasyllable for the Italian decasyllable, and by composing the noble and austere 286 Roman poetry of his letters, odes and elegies.
Most of Shakespeare’s lines conform to the normal type of the decasyllable, and the rest are accounted for by familiar and rational rules of variation.
He treated the Alexandrine of Corneille exactly as Pope treated the decasyllable of Dryden, and as Virgil treated the hexameter of Lucretius.
Both doggerel and fourteeners appear in the quaint productions called Three Ladies of London, etc.; but by this time the decasyllable began to appear with them and to edge them out.
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