da-DAH |
da-DUM |
___ foot |
One foot |
Foot type |
Small foot |
Verse foot |
Verse unit |
Metric unit |
Poetic foot |
Bard's foot |
Poetic part |
Pound foot? |
Poetry foot |
Poetic unit |
Sonnet unit |
Metric foot |
Sonnet part |
Certain foot |
Donne's foot |
Frost's foot |
Poetic meter |
Rubaiyat bit |
To be," e.g. |
Metrical foot |
Metrical unit |
Foot of verse |
Poet’s foot |
Byron's foot? |
Rhythmic foot |
Literary foot |
Prosodic foot |
Poetic measure |
Foot in a line |
Beat in poetry |
Foot of a poet |
Sonnet measure |
Shelley's foot |
Foot for Frost |
Foot in a poem |
Petrarchan unit |
Short-long foot |
The Bard's foot |
A metrical unit |
Foot in a meter |
Part of a meter |
Foot, to a poet |
Hurray" or "alas |
Anapest's cousin |
A foot in a line |
Foot in a sonnet |
Not-so-big foot? |
Sonneteer's unit |
Anapest relative |
Poetic meter unit |
Two-syllable foot |
Anapest's relative |
Ogden Nash's foot? |
One foot in a line |
Shakespeare's foot |
Maya Angelou's foot |
One foot, to a poet |
Kind of poetic foot |
Bit of poetic rhythm |
Poet's metrical foot |
Part of a pentameter? |
Poetic unit of rhythm |
Trochee's counterpart |
Hamlet's "To be," e.g. |
It's scanned in poetry |
Metrical unit, in odes |
Foot that's in a meter? |
Metrical foot in poetry |
Metrical short-long foot |
Foot in a line of poetry |
Two-syllable poetic unit |
Two-syllable poetic foot |
But, soft!", for instance |
Foot used to keep rhythm? |
Hamlet's "To be," for one |
One of Shakespeare's feet |
Short-long foot in verse. |
Songwriter's poetic meter |
Pentameter component, often |
Shakespeare's "to be," e.g. |
Foot that's part of a meter |
Behold" or "arise" in poetry |
Part of da-DUM, da-DUM, da-DUM |
Metrical foot of two syllables. |
One of two in "The Grapes of Wrath |
One of 70 in a Shakespearean sonnet |
One of three in "To be or not to be |
Vermont but not New Hampshire, e.g.? |
One of four in "As I Was Going to St. Ives |
One-fifth of "If music be the food of love, play on |
Two-syllable poetic foot, often found in pentameter |
One-quarter of "Whose woods these are I think I know |