Iambic+verse
71Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius Scipio Nasica — Denarius of Metellus Scipio with elephant skin headgear to represent African imperium (47 46 BC). Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius Scipio Nasica (ca. 100/98 BC – 46 BC), in modern scholarship often as Metellus Scipio, was a Roman consul and… …
72Choniates, Michael — ▪ Byzantine historian erroneously called Michael Acominatus born c. 1140, Chonae, Byzantine Empire [now in Turkey] died c. 1220, Boudonitza, Byzantine Empire [near modern Thermopylai, Greece] Byzantine humanist scholar and archbishop of… …
73rhythm — noun /ˈɹɪ.ð(ə)m/ a) The variation of strong and weak elements (such as duration, accent) of sounds, notably in speech or music, over time; a beat or meter. Dance to the rhythm of the music. b) A specifically defined pattern of …
74Damocrates — Servilius Damocrates (or Democrates, Greek: Δαμοκράτης, Δημοκράτης) was a Greek physician at Rome in the middle to late 1st century CE. He may have received the praenomen Servillius from his having become a client of the Servilia gens. Galen… …
75ARCHIL`OCHUS — a celebrated lyric poet of Greece; of a satiric and often bitter vein, the inventor of iambic verse (714 676 B.C.) …
76inflection — inflection, intonation, accent are comparable when they designate a particular manner of employing the tones of the voice in speech. Inflection implies change in pitch or tone; it often suggests a variation expressive of emotion or sentiment, and …
77iamb — /ˈaɪæmb / (say uyamb), /ˈaɪæm / (say uyam) noun a metrical foot of two syllables, a short followed by a long, or an unaccented by an accented (˘ ¯ ), as in Come live with me and be my love, which consists of four iambs. {Latin iambus an iambic… …
78terza rima — /tɛətsə ˈrimə/ (say tairtsuh reemuh) noun an Italian form of iambic verse consisting of eleven syllable lines arranged in tercets, the middle line of each rhyming with the first and the third lines of the following tercet. {Italian: third rhyme} …
79στιχίαμβον — στιχίαμβος iambic verse masc acc sg …
80iambist — ̷ ̷ˈ ̷ ̷bə̇st, ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ noun ( s) Etymology: Greek iambistēs, from iambizein to write iambs, from iambos + izein ize : one who writes iambic verse …