51Թ

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senarius

[ suh-nair-ee-uhs ]

noun

plural senarii
  1. Classical Prosody. a Latin verse of six feet, especially an iambic trimeter.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of senarius1

First recorded in 1540–50; from Latin ŧܲ, equivalent to ŧ(ī) “six each” (distributive numeral of sex “six”) + adjective suffix; -ary ( def )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

He was considered the inventor of parody and of a peculiar metre, the scazon or choliambus, which substitutes a spondee for the final iambus of an iambic senarius, and is an appropriate form for the burlesque character of his poems.

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That we do not know the inventors of the great single poetic vehicles, the hexameter, the iambic Senarius, the English heroic, the French Alexandrine, is one thing.

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As soon as the suspense is over, it drops to the iambic senarius.

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If we should arrange the commoner Latin verses in a sequence according to the emotional effects which they produce, at the bottom of the series would stand the iambic senarius.

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Consequently the common medium for conversation or for the narrative in a composition like comedy made up entirely of verse is the senarius.

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