释义 |
Definition of trochaic in English: trochaicadjective trə(ʊ)ˈkeɪɪktroʊˈkeɪɪk Prosody Consisting of or featuring trochees. Example sentencesExamples - The first line's primarily iambic structure separates it from the second, fourth and fifth lines trochaic feet.
- But if you listen at the line carefully, it's a line of regular trochaic pentameter.
- The auditory ease of the merry mockeries of maidens is abruptly undermined by the trochaic retarding of the ‘sharp voices’ insisting on ‘maiden labour.’
- The only notable exceptions are the trochaic tetrameters of ‘The Phoenix and Turtle’ and the iambic tetrameters of Sonnet 145.
- Calendars begins with the cadenced trochaic tetrameter rhythms of ‘Landing Under Water, I See Roots’.
noun trə(ʊ)ˈkeɪɪktroʊˈkeɪɪk usually trochaicsProsody A type of verse that consists of or features trochees. Example sentencesExamples - The new metre is most likely to result from poems written in what are called trochaics, or two-syllabled feet stressed on the first syllable.
- His infantile trochaics addressed to children (‘Dimply damsel, sweetly smiling’, etc.) earned him the nickname of ‘Namby Pamby’, though Johnson described them as his pleasantest pieces.
- Trochaics have rarely been more amusingly used than in Lewis Carroll's 'Hiawatha's Photographing', in which Hiawatha is exasperatedly trying to take portraits of a very tiresome and camera-conscious Victorian family.
Origin Late 16th century: via Latin from Greek trokhaikos, from trokhaios (see trochee). Rhymes alcaic, algebraic, Aramaic, archaic, choleraic, Cyrenaic, deltaic, formulaic, Hebraic, Judaic, Mishnaic, Mithraic, mosaic, Pharisaic, prosaic, Ptolemaic, Romaic, spondaic, stanzaic Definition of trochaic in US English: trochaicadjectivetrōˈkāiktroʊˈkeɪɪk Prosody Consisting of or featuring trochees. Example sentencesExamples - The first line's primarily iambic structure separates it from the second, fourth and fifth lines trochaic feet.
- The auditory ease of the merry mockeries of maidens is abruptly undermined by the trochaic retarding of the ‘sharp voices’ insisting on ‘maiden labour.’
- The only notable exceptions are the trochaic tetrameters of ‘The Phoenix and Turtle’ and the iambic tetrameters of Sonnet 145.
- Calendars begins with the cadenced trochaic tetrameter rhythms of ‘Landing Under Water, I See Roots’.
- But if you listen at the line carefully, it's a line of regular trochaic pentameter.
nountrōˈkāiktroʊˈkeɪɪk usually trochaicsProsody A type of verse that consists of or features trochees. Example sentencesExamples - Trochaics have rarely been more amusingly used than in Lewis Carroll's 'Hiawatha's Photographing', in which Hiawatha is exasperatedly trying to take portraits of a very tiresome and camera-conscious Victorian family.
- The new metre is most likely to result from poems written in what are called trochaics, or two-syllabled feet stressed on the first syllable.
- His infantile trochaics addressed to children (‘Dimply damsel, sweetly smiling’, etc.) earned him the nickname of ‘Namby Pamby’, though Johnson described them as his pleasantest pieces.
Origin Late 16th century: via Latin from Greek trokhaikos, from trokhaios (see trochee). |