History, asked by AshitaKrishna, 1 year ago

what do you mean by verses ​

Answers

Answered by Pɪᴋᴀᴄʜᴜɢɪʀʟ
2

Explanation:

writing arranged in lines which have a definite rhythm and often finish with the same sound (rhyme).

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Answered by tanvi524
3

Answer:

1Verse, stanza, strophe, stave are terms for a metrical grouping in poetic composition. Verse is often mistakenly used for stanza, but is properly only a single metrical line. A stanza is a succession of lines (verses) commonly bound together by a rhyme scheme, and usually forming one of a series of similar groups that constitute a poem: The four-line stanza is the one most frequently used in English. Strophe (originally the section of a Greek choral ode sung while the chorus was moving from right to left) is in English poetry practically equivalent to “section”; a strophe may be unrhymed or without strict form, but may be a stanza: Strophes are divisions of odes. Stave is a word (now seldom used) that means a stanza set to music or intended to be sung: a stave of a hymn; a stave of a drinking song.

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