| Poetic foot |
| Limerick foot |
| Type of verse |
| Metrical foot |
| Three-part foot |
| Bit of a limerick |
| Dactyl's relative |
| In the Mood," e.g. |
| Foot for Swinburne |
| Pattern in prosody |
| Short, short, long |
| Three-syllable foot |
| Reverse of a dactyl. |
| Foot of poetic meter. |
| Au revoir," for example |
| Poet's three-syllable foot |
| Three-syllable poetic foot |
| Standard part of a limerick |
| Three-syllable foot, in poetry |
| Three-syllable foot, as in "bada-bing |
| Meter of "I am monarch of all I survey. |
| Three-syllable foot whose last syllable is stressed |
| Two short syllables followed by a long one, poetically |
| One of four in "'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house |
| Poetic pattern found four times in "'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house |