Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- Having the same number of syllables; specifically, in Greekand Lat.gram.,of nouns,having the same number of syllables in the oblique cases as in the nominative.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective Having the same number of syllables in all its inflections.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Having the same number of
syllables in all itsinflections .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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He knows then that it is parisyllabic verse and from that he can accent the whole piece.
Miscellany 1784
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The following is a specimen of the parisyllabic verse, wherein the instances of this trochee beginning the verse are noted:
Miscellany 1784
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He should take care not to rely on the first foot of any line, because, as has been before observed, that is often a trochee even in the parisyllabic verse.
Miscellany 1784
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That verse wherein the accent is on the even syllables may be called even or parisyllabic verse, and corresponds with what has been called iambic verse; retaining the term iambus for the name of the foot we shall thereby mean an unaccented and an accented syllable.
Miscellany 1784
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If he can find in the piece any one word the accent of which he already knows, that word will enable him to distinguish if it be parisyllabic or imparisyllabic.
Miscellany 1784
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In the second example the unaccented syllable with which the parisyllabic (even) verse should begin is omitted in the first and fifth lines.
Miscellany 1784
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There are some few instances indeed wherein the subordinate accent is differently arranged, as parisyllabic, Constantinople.
Miscellany 1784
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In parisyllabic verse, when a trochee begins the verse, he will pronounce that foot wrong.
Miscellany 1784
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An even number of syllables with a single rhyme, or an odd number with a double one, prove it to be parisyllabic, e. g.
Miscellany 1784
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