What is another word for versification?

Pronunciation: [vˌɜːsɪfɪkˈe͡ɪʃən] (IPA)

Versification is the art of composing poetry and putting it into a verse form. There are many synonyms for this term including poetics, prosody, metric, rhythm, cadence, rhyme, and meter. Poetics pertains to the study of poetry, including its composition, language, and style. Prosody refers to the study of the sounds and rhythms of poetry, while metric deals with the way that syllables are stressed within a line of verse. Rhythm and cadence are both related to the musical qualities of poetry, with rhyme and meter referring to the way that sounds are arranged within a line of verse. All of these terms are crucial to understanding the art of versification and the techniques used by poets to create meaning and beauty in their work.

What are the hypernyms for Versification?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Versification?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

What are the opposite words for versification?

The antonyms of "versification" suggest the absence of structuring language into poetry or metrical verse. Words like "prose," "inelegance," and "clumsiness" describe the opposite of versification's nod to musicality and rhythm. While "free verse" embraces a looseness to the verse's structure, "unmetered" implies an absence of any distinct formula to the composition. Contrastingly, "incoherent" suggests disorganization and a lack of clear and concise thoughtfulness. Ultimately, the antonyms of versification point to a rejection of prescribed form and meter in favor of formlessness, disorganization, and inelegance.

What are the antonyms for Versification?

Usage examples for Versification

4. Chaucer's Language, versification, and Method of Narrative Poetry.
"America To-day, Observations and Reflections"
William Archer
Humour of a kind most rare at all times, and especially in the present day, runs through every page, and passages of true poetry and delicious versification prevent the continual play of sarcasm from becoming tedious.
"Cattle and Cattle-breeders"
William M'Combie
This kind of poetry has been supposed capable of uniting the vigorous numbers and wild fiction, which occasionally charm us in the ancient ballad, with a greater equality of versification, and elegance of sentiment, than we can expect to find in the works of a rude age.
"Minstrelsy of the Scottish border (3rd ed) (1 of 3)"
Walter Scott

Famous quotes with Versification

  • I learned versification chiefly from Dryden's works, who has improved it much beyond any of our former poets, and would probably have brought it to its perfection, had not he been unhappily obliged to write so often in haste.
    John Dryden
  • The success of his animated him to a higher undertaking; ...he gave us a complete English Eneid. Pitt, engaging as a rival with Dryden, naturally observed his failures, and avoided them; and, as he wrote after Pope's Iliad, he had an example of an exact, equable, and splendid versification. With these advantages, seconded by great diligence, he might successfully labour particular passages, and escape many errors. If the two versions are compared, perhaps the result would be, that Dryden leads the reader forward by his general vigour and sprightliness, and Pitt often stops him to contemplate the excellence of a single couplet; that Dryden's faults are forgotten in the hurry of delight, and that Pitt's beauties are neglected in the languor of a cold and listless perusal; that Pitt pleases the criticks, and Dryden the people; that Pitt is quoted, and Dryden read.
    Christopher Pitt
  • In fine, if my partiality to Mr. Pitt does not mislead me, I should think he has executed his work [] with great spirit, that he has a fine flow of harmonious versification, and has rendered his author's sense with faithfulness and perspicuity.
    Christopher Pitt
  • This poet contains great beauties, a sweet and harmonious versification, easy elocution, a fine imagination: Yet ... it soon becomes a kind of task-reading; and it requires some effort and resolution to carry us on to the end of his long performance. ...the affectations, and conceits, and fopperies of chivalry...appear ridiculous... The tediousness of continued allegory, and that too seldom striking or ingenious, has also contributed to render the peculiarly tiresome; not to mention the too great frequency of its descriptions, and the languor of its stanza...
    Edmund Spenser
  • He was indecisive, vacillating, with more wit than judgment, and with more judgment than earnestness. In that age of high hearts, stormy passions, and determined purpose, he looks helpless and not at home, like a butterfly in an eagle's eyrie. A gifted, accomplished, and apparently an amiable man, he was a feeble, and almost a despicable character. The parliament seem to have thought him hardly worth hanging. Cromwell bore with him only as a kinsman, and respected him only as a scholar. Charles II liked to laugh at his jokes, and to Saville his company was as good as an additional bottle of wine. … Although he unquestionably in some points improved our correctness of style and our versification, there is not much to be said either for or against his poetry. It is as a whole a mass of smooth and easy, yet systematic, trifling. Nine-tenths of it does not rise above mediocrity, and the tenth that remains is more distinguished by grace than by grandeur or depth.
    Edmund Waller

Related words: versification definition, inverted versification, versification in english, versification in india, versification definition in tamil

Related questions:

  • Is versification a form of poetry?
  • What is the meaning of versification?
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