| Frost feet |
| Keats feet |
| Poetic feet |
| Metric feet |
| Poet's feet |
| Poetry feet |
| Poetic units |
| Scanned feet |
| Metrical feet |
| Keatsian feet |
| Poetic meters |
| Rhythmic feet |
| Frost's feet? |
| Metrical units |
| Feet of a poet |
| Feet, of sorts |
| Verse cadences |
| Feet for poets |
| Sonnet segments |
| Whittier's feet |
| Feet in a meter |
| Pentameter parts |
| Blank-verse feet |
| Feet with rhythm |
| Metrical measures |
| Ogden Nash's feet |
| Shakespeare'sfeet |
| Two-syllable feet |
| Shakespeare's feet |
| Shakespearean feet |
| Feet in some meters |
| Sonnet line fivesome |
| Poet's "da-DA, da-DA |
| da-DUM, da-DUM, da-DUM |
| Feet for W. S. Gilbert |
| Feet of common measure |
| Some two-syllable feet |
| Feet on the desk, maybe |
| Pentameter parts, maybe |
| Starts of most limericks |
| Two-syllable metric feet |
| Above" and "beyond," e.g. |
| Shakespearean sonnet units |
| Feet, as measured in poetry |
| Feet found in English verse |
| Feet that go along with the beat |
| Quartet in "Whose woods these are I think I know |
| Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" has five of these |