释义 |
‖ anaclasis Pros.|əˈnækləsɪs| Also -klasis. Pl. -ases. [mod.L., a. Gr. ἀνάκλασις bending back (see anaclastic a.).] In Ionic verse: an interchange of the final long syllable of the first metron with the opening short syllable of the second.
1784J. B. Seale Anal. Gr. Metres 25 In the intermediate places a second Pæon is occasionally joined to a second or third Epitrite, so that the two Feet together are equal in time to two Ionic Feet. This is called an ανακλασις. 1830J. Seager tr. Hermann's Doctrine of Metres xxxviii. 98 This method is termed ἀνάκλασις, and the verses themselves ἀνακλώµενοι, because the change in the numbers is not made in one Ionic foot, but in two, the end of the one, and the beginning of the other being changed. 1900[in def. of galliambic a.]. 1901T. D. Goodell Chapt. Gr. Metric v. 144 Not only were ionic kola extended to eighteen lines, with or without anaklasis, but also the plain iambic and trochaic. 1938G. D. Thomson tr. Aeschylus: Oresteia ii. 327 A rearrangement of the opening syllables (anaclasis). 1949Oxf. Classical Dict. 567/1 The view..that the anacreontic is derived from the ionic dimeter by the interchange of the final long of the first metron with the opening short of the second (‘anaclasis’). |