cretic
See also: Cretic
English edit
Etymology edit
From Latin creticus, "of Crete, Cretan", from Latin Creta, "Crete".
Pronunciation edit
Adjective edit
Examples |
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In Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream the fairy speaks: "Over hill, Over Dale." (Thus the line has six syllables and naturally is spoken as "OV-er HILL/OV-er DALE.") |
cretic (not comparable)
- Using or relating to a metrical pattern of poetry where each foot is composed of three syllables, the first and third of which are stressed and the second is unstressed. This pattern is very rare in English poetry.
Noun edit
cretic (plural cretics)
- A verse of this kind.