A caesura (derived from the Latin caes?ra, meaning "to cut") is a pause or interruption in poetry or music. The opposite of a caesura, where a line of poetry continues in flow from one line to the next, is called an enjambment.
A line. Ex: lines 1 through 4 uses internal rhyme
CAESURA
Half a line of verse is called a hemistich. A hemistich is a division of a line of poetry into two parts, often creating a pause or a sense of completion within the line.
The term is called "syncope." It refers to the omission of an unstressed syllable within a metrical line of poetry.
The measured arrangement of words in poetry is called "meter." Meter involves organizing and counting stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry to create rhythm and structure.
When words within a line of poetry have the same sounds, this is called alliteration. Alliteration is a literary device in which a series of words in close proximity have the same initial consonant sound.
In poetry analysis, marking the meter of a poem is called scansion. Scansion involves analyzing the stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry to determine its metrical pattern and identify the rhythm of the poem.
It is called a meter.
The meter tells you the number of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry.
This is called meter in poetry. Meter refers to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry, creating a rhythmic structure.
The type and number of feet in a line of poetry constitutes itsmeter(apex)