prosody

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English - Turkish
English - English
The study of poetic meter; the patterns of sounds and rhythms in verse
The study of rhythm, intonation, stress, and related attributes in speech
the science of poetical forms
{n} the art of metrical composition
(Dilbilim) Meter (British English spelling: metre) describes the linguistic sound patterns of a verse. Scansion is the analysis of poetry's metrical and rhythmic patterns. Prosody is sometimes used to describe poetic meter, and indicates the analysis of similar aspects of language in linguistics. Meter is part of many formal verse forms
(Dilbilim) In linguistics, prosody (from Greek προσωδία) is the study of rhythm, intonation, and related attributes in speech. It describes all the acoustic properties of speech that cannot be predicted from a local window on the orthographic (or similar) transcription. So, prosody is relative to a default pronunciation of a phoneme/feature bundle/segment/syllable; it does not include coarticulation because coarticulation is predictable from the immediate phonological or orthographic neighborhood. Qualitatively, one can understand prosody as the difference (in terms of acoustic properties) between a well-performed play, and one on first reading
The inflection, timing, and accent of speech
the study of poetic meter and the art of versification the patterns of stress and intonation in a language
the patterns of stress and intonation in a language
the variations in stress, pitch, and rhythms of speech that convey meanings
the patterns of sound and rhythm in poetry and spoken language, or the rules for arranging these patterns (prosodia , from prosoidia, from oide ). Study of the elements of language, especially metre, that contribute to rhythmic and acoustic effects in poetry. The basis of "traditional" prosody in English is the classification of verse according to the syllable stress of its lines. Effects such as rhyme scheme, alliteration, and assonance further influence a poem's "sound meaning." Nonmetrical prosodic study is sometimes applied to modern poetry, and visual prosody is used when verse is "shaped" by its typographical arrangement. Prosody also involves examining the subtleties of a poem's rhythm, its "flow," the historical period to which it belongs, the poetic genre, and the poet's individual style
Signifies the systematic study of versification in poetry; that is, a study of the principles and practice of meter, rhyme and stanza forms
(prosody) a system of versification
the study of poetic meter and the art of versification
That part of grammar which treats of the quantity of syllables, of accent, and of the laws of versification or metrical composition
The pitch, loudness, tempo, and rhythm patterns of spoken language that result in phrasing and expression
The systematic study of versification which covers the principles of metre, rhythm, rhyme and stanza forms; or a particular system of versification In linguistics the term is applied to patterns of stress and intonation in ordinary human speech Prosody in the literary sense is also known as metrics S
{i} study of poetic meter; metrical system, system for creating verses
(1): the mechanics of verse poetry--its sounds, rhythms, versification, meter, stanzaic form, alliteration, assonance, euphony, onomatopoeia, and rhyme (2) The study or analysis of the previously listed material
The art of setting words to music
The study of poetic meters and versification See Foot
prosodies
plural of prosody
prosody

    Hyphenation

    pros·o·dy

    Turkish pronunciation

    präsıdi

    Pronunciation

    /ˈpräsədē/ /ˈprɑːsədiː/

    Etymology

    [ 'prä-s&-dE, -z&- ] (noun.) 15th century. From Middle French prosodie, from Latin prosōdia, from Ancient Greek προσῳδία (prosōidía, “song sung to music; pronunciation of syllable”), from πρός (pros, “to”) + ᾠδή (ōidē, “song”).
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