Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- Literally, prose-poetic; in ancient prosody, noting a variety of trochaic or iambic verse in which dactyls are combined with trochees or anapests with iambi: so called because this apparent irregularity seems to approach the non-observance of metrical laws characteristic of prose.
- noun A verse of the character defined above.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective (Gr. Pros.) Composed of dactyls and trochees so arranged as to produce a movement like that of ordinary speech.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word logaoedic.
Examples
-
Running Rhythm in having or being only one nominal rhythm, a mixed or 'logaoedic' one, instead of three, but on the other hand in having twice the flexibility of foot, so that any two stresses may either follow one another running or be divided by one, two, or three slack syllables.
Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins Now First Published Gerard Manley Hopkins 1866
-
And hence Sprung Rhythm differs from Running Rhythm in having or being only one nominal rhythm, a mixed or logaoedic one, instead of three, but on the other hand in having twice the flexibility of foot, so that any two stresses may either follow one another running or be divided by one, two, or three slack syllables.
Authors Preface 1918
-
In Sprung Rhythm, as in logaoedic rhythm generally, the feet are assumed to be equally long or strong and their seeming inequality is made up by pause or stressing.
Authors Preface 1918
-
In Sprung Rhythm, as in logaoedic rhythm generally, the feet are assumed to be equally long or strong and their seeming inequality is made up by pause or stressing.
Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins Now First Published Gerard Manley Hopkins 1866
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.