- Found in paragraph 11: (...) example, to ignore rhyme and rhythm (Rhythm, (...)
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6 articles with
rhyme
i General
ii Context, Social Groups and Environmental Issues
- Found in paragraph 8: (...) nt allegory in “The Rhyme of the Ancient Mari (...)
iii Distribution and Communication
iii.1Oral and Written Lyric Poetry
Müller, Adalberto - 2025
- Found in paragraph 14: (...) ral poetry, such as rhyme and alliteration. B (...)
- Found in bibliography / webliography
iv Textual Forms, Modes, and Subgenres
- Found in paragraph 6: (...) ers to its being ‘unrhymed’). Stanzas are bas (...)
- Found in paragraph 9: (...) sive term for cheap rhymes, or, rarely, for “ (...)
- Found in paragraph 11: (...) lines coupled by a rhyme that do not corresp (...)
- Found in paragraph 12: (...) the homeoteleuton (rhyme or assonance), whic (...)
- Found in paragraph 27: (...) omeoteleuton (i.e., rhyme or assonance), with (...)
- Found in paragraph 37: (...) laisse (later also rhymed) for the epic, the (...)
- Found in paragraph 38: (...) ation of metres and rhymes in genre structuri (...)
- Found in paragraph 39: (...) etre, while the monorhyme quatrain is tendent (...)
- Found in paragraph 41: (...) absence of a fixed rhyme scheme). (...)
- Found in paragraph 45: (...) osílabos with fixed rhyme (or assonance) in e (...)
- Found in paragraph 53: (...) prime example of unrhymed iambic pentameter (...)
- Found in title 11: (...) Homeoteleuton, rhyme, assonance (...)
- Found in paragraph 57: (...) Homeoteleuton (rhyme or assonance) has c (...)
- Found in paragraph 58: (...) origin of the word “rhyme”. Three prominent i (...)
- Found in paragraph 59: (...) Sequences of rhymes are usually design (...)
- Found in paragraph 61: (...) periments with more rhyme words (teleutons) b (...)
- Found in paragraph 62: (...) Examples are the unrhymed Italian versi scio (...)
- Found in paragraph 63: (...) s an alternative to rhyme, and vers libres, o (...)
- Found in paragraph 68: (...) Stabreim alternate rhyme (ABAB) Ital.: rima (...)
- Found in paragraph 41: (...) itionalist forms of rhyme and metre (Rhythm, (...)
- Found in paragraph 55: (...) f verse, metre, and rhyme were usually deemed (...)
- Found in paragraph 70: (...) free-verse poetry (Rhyme, Metre, Line). But (...)
- Found in paragraph 79: (...) etry is metre-less, rhymeless, and lexically (...)
- Found in paragraph 17: (...) hony and euphony,” “rhyme and repetition,” “r (...)
- Found in paragraph 20: (...) pes, alliterations, rhyme, etc.) and sometime (...)
