A nine-line poem is technically called a nonet, but the scarcity of the form means that the word is very rarely used, or found.
Most poems set in nine-line stanzas follow the pattern of Sir Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene: eight lines in iambic pentameter, followed by a ninth line set in iambic hexameter (the extra foot, as well as the 12-syllable line itself, is called an Alexandrine.)
The usual rhyme scheme for such a stanza is A-B-A-B-B-C-B-C-C. The form is popular enough to have acquired its own term: a Spenserian stanza.
A sexain.
The last six lines of a Petrarchan Sonnet (whose 14 lines are usually thematically divided 8-6) is called a sestet.
A poem with four lines is called Quatrain
its called nothing, it is just a 32 line poem.
An eighteen line poem is aclled as "SONNET."
Im a riddle in nine syllables <<< Works
triplet
A 10-line poem is called a decastich and a 13-line poem is called a terza rima.
An unrhymed seven line poem is called a Rhapsod.
A poem with four lines is called Quatrain
its called nothing, it is just a 32 line poem.
it is called a butt
its called a sonnet
Sestets
An eighteen line poem is aclled as "SONNET."
A poem or a rhyming poem or a rhymed poem.
Im a riddle in nine syllables <<< Works
It is called an enjambment when a line of a poem continues without a pause into the next line but the sentence or phrase remains uninterrupted.
triplet