Crossword-Solution: SENARIUS
Anagrams
| Word | Anagrams | |
|---|---|---|
| SENARIUS | anagram | ERUSSIAN |
We have 3 clues for the answer “SENARIUS”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| IAMBIC trimeter | 1 answer |
| verse of six feet | 1 answer |
| type of poem | 21 answers |
✏️ Suggest another clue
Know another question for crossword solution "SENARIUS"? Please add your clue to the biggest crossword databank now!
Dermatological complaint
?
E
?
C
?
Z
?
E
?
M
?
A
Hint 1 meaning
An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the
presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the
discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin
covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum.
Hint 2 anagram
ZEMACE
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
9 +1
New Suggestion for "SENARIUS"
Related word tools
Sentences with SENARIUS (5)
Paris, 1820,) gives additional arguments in confirmation of the opinions of his learned predecessors, Nevelet and Vavassor.] [Footnote 17: Scazonic, or halting, iambics; a choliambic (a lame, halting iambic) differs from the iambic Senarius in always having a spondee or trichee for its last foot; the fifth foot, to avoid shortness of meter, being generally an iambic.
His technical skill is very considerable; the iambic senarius becomes in his hands an extremely pleasing rhythm, though the occurrence of spondees in the second and fourth place savours of archaic usage.
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.
With this view of the arsis, or ictus, we may ask how far, in each particular foot of the senarius, it coincides with the quantity.
Now the fact of a syllable with an arsis being, in Greek, rarely final, taken along with that of the sixth syllable requiring, in the senarius, an arsis, gives as a matter of necessity, the circumstance that, in the Greek drama, the sixth syllable shall occur anywhere rather than at the end of a word; and this is only another way of saying, that, in a tragic senarius, the syllable in question shall generally be followed by other syllables in the same word.