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(Edebiyat) free verse
A poetic form divided into lines of no particular length or meter, without a rhyme scheme

Whitman uses free verse to achieve effects impossible under even the broad restrictions of blank verse.

Also known as Vers Libre, this is the most common form of modern poetry Rhythm is more controlled than in prose but lacking regular verse structure, stress patterns and rhyming of more traditional poetry
- Verse that has neither regular rhyme nor regular meter
unrhymed verse without a consistent metrical pattern
- also called open form poetry, free verse refers to poems characterized by their nonconformity to established patterns of meter, rhyme, and stanza Free verse uses elements such as speech patterns, grammar, emphasis, and breath pauses to decide line breaks, and usually does not rhyme
lines that have rhythm, but no determined meter or rhyme scheme
poetry whose lines do not have a regular pattern
Lines containing rhythm but nonmetrical lines For examples, check out theFree Verse page on Tangerine! G H
poetry that is characterized by varying line lengths, lack of traditional meter, and nonrhyming lines
Poetry composed of either rhymed or unrhymed lines that have no set meter
Refers to poetry that does not follow a prescribed form but is characterized by the irregularity in the length of lines and the lack of a regular metrical pattern and rhyme Free verse may use other repetitive patterns instead (like words, phrases, structures)
poetry which is not truly poetry in that it follows no regular rhyme or rhythm [top]
verse without regular rhythm or meter, poetry not conforming to a standard form
Verse that has neither regular rhyme nor regular meter Free verse often uses cadences rather than uniform metrical feet
Verse composed of variable, usually unrhymed lines having no fixed metrical pattern. poetry that does not have a fixed structure and does not rhyme blank verse. Poetry organized according to the cadences of speech and image patterns rather than according to a regular metrical scheme. Its rhythms are based on patterned elements such as sounds, words, phrases, sentences, and paragraphs, rather than on the traditional units of metrical feet (see metrical foot). Free verse thus eliminates much of the artificiality and some of the aesthetic distance of poetic expression. It became current in English poetics in the early 20th century. See also prosody
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