A poetical foot of three sylables (-- ~ ~), one long followed by two short, or one accented followed by two unaccented
a repeated sound pattern in poetry, consisting of one long sound followed by two short sounds, as in the word 'carefully' (dactylus, from daktylos (because of the length of the three finger-joints))
A three syllable foot which is accented on the first syllable An example of this would be the word "merrily," which is spoken: MER - ri - ly
- a metrical foot consisting of one stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables
a metrical foot consisting of an accented syllable followed by two unaccented ones / ' ~ ~ / Examples of dactylic words are "comedy" and "higgledy," and of largely dactylic poems Tennyson's "The Charge of the Light Brigade" and Thomas Hood's "The Bridge of Sighs " Longfellow's Evangeline is written in dactylic hexameter, the metre of Homer and of Ovid's Metamorphoses
{i} division of poetry containing an accented syllable before two unaccented syllables
A metrical foot of three syllables, one long (or stressed) followed by two short (or unstressed), as in happily The dactyl is the reverse of the anapest
A three-syllable foot consisting of a heavy stress and two light stresses See meter Examples of words that constitute dactyls include notable, horrible, and parable
A poetic foot or unit consisting of one stressed (or long) syllable followed by two unstressed (or short) syllables
mer\b6ciful; so called from the similarity of its arrangement to that of the joints of a finger
[ 'dak-t&l, -"til ] (noun.) 14th century. From Ancient Greek δάκτυλος (daktulos, “a finger”), three bones of the finger corresponding to three syllables.