- A
strophe (/ˈstroʊfiː/) is a
poetic term
originally referring to the
first part of the ode in
Ancient Gr**** tragedy,
followed by the
antistrophe and epode...
- world.
Women often wore a
strophic, the bra of the time,
under their garments and
around the mid-portion of
their body. The
strophic was a wide band of wool...
-
Strophic form – also
called verse-repeating form,
chorus form, AAA song form, or one-part song form – is a song
structure in
which all
verses or stanzas...
- In
Spanish poetry, a
silva is a
poetic form
consisting of in eleven- and seven-
syllable lines:
hendecasyllables (endecasílabos) and
heptasyllables (heptasílabos)...
- girdle", may be
describing a kind of
decorated breast-band (στρόφιον,
stróphion), for
Aphrodite advises Hera: "Take now and lay in thy
bosom this zone"...
-
though many
early Lieder by the
likes of
Franz Schubert are in
simple strophic form. The
accompaniment of
European art
songs is
considered as an important...
- The
locus amoenus: the
strophes that come
after strophe 52 of
Canto IX, and some of the main
parts that
appear from
strophe 68 to 95
describe the scenery...
-
supernum prodiens" (the last two
strophes begin with "O
salutaris hostia") and "Pange
lingua gloriosi" (the last two
strophes begin with "Tantum ergo"). The...
- and
repeating lyrics for the choruses. Po****r
music often makes use of
strophic form,
sometimes in
conjunction with the
twelve bar blues. In the tenth...
- batch, fit, and stave. The term
stanza has a
similar meaning to
strophe,
though strophe sometimes refers to an
irregular set of lines, as
opposed to regular...