释义 |
Definition of strophe in English: strophenoun ˈstrəʊfiˈstroʊfi 1The first section of an ancient Greek choral ode or of one division of it. (古希腊合唱颂歌的)第一诗节 Example sentencesExamples - It puts an end to the cyclic character of the six strophes and opens the door back into quotidian time.
- Most celebrated were the Epodes, songs in simple strophes usually made up of a hexameter or iambic trimeter plus one or two shorter cola.
- One female sang two short strophes of a typically male song.
- For example, in Schubert's Heidenröslein three verses, or strophes, are set to the same melody, with no alterations to the voice part or the piano accompaniment.
- We measured song repertoire size as the number of different song figures in 25 consecutive song strophes.
- Frequency and strophe length were measured in narrow and wide band modes, respectively.
- The distance between the two vertical arrows indicates the strophe length.
- 1.1 A group of lines forming a section of a lyric poem.
(抒情诗的)诗节 Example sentencesExamples - There are surreal poems like ‘Battle Report,’ with its opening strophe.
- He believes that the syllable count of poetic lines, strophes, stanzas, and poems was essential to the writing of biblical poetry.
- Such are the strophes exchanged between America's intellectual divinities.
- Syllabic verse is generally organized in four-line strophes, whereas the number of lines in a rosc passage is not fixed.
- Her specific topics are seen as well in the first strophe, along with a judgment of the quality of her voice.
- It deals with the time factor employed in or between lines or units or strophes of poetry.
- The poem's initial strophe is careful, slow-moving, tonally sophisticated, and somewhat puzzling.
- Fourthly, there is a subtle, but powerful alliteration in the fourth line of the second strophe, ‘Amidst an ocean full of flying fishes’.
- The poem's closing strophe shows how Kaufman had become a master in capturing the lyrical qualities of the music and bringing them to bear in his poetry.
- In some strophes of the poem I tried to depict the tempest, followed by the calm of the sea.
- Though the poems were in a European habit, Bialik imbues them with Biblical strophes, as well as prophetic metaphor, syntax, and meter.
- The order in strophe one appears in stanza two as 6 i, 5 2, 4 3.
- An ‘aria’ was distinguished from a ‘madrigal’ in having a strophic text, with the same music, or a variation of it, set to each strophe.
- The most usual skaldic metre is ‘dróttkvaett ’, a strophe which consists of eight six-syllable lines, each ending in a trochee.
OriginEarly 17th century: from Greek strophē, literally 'turning', from strephein 'to turn': the term originally denoted a movement from right to left made by a Greek chorus, or lines of choral song recited during this. Definition of strophe in US English: strophenounˈstroʊfiˈstrōfē 1The first section of an ancient Greek choral ode or of one division of it. (古希腊合唱颂歌的)第一诗节 Compare with antistrophe and epode (sense 2) Example sentencesExamples - It puts an end to the cyclic character of the six strophes and opens the door back into quotidian time.
- The distance between the two vertical arrows indicates the strophe length.
- One female sang two short strophes of a typically male song.
- For example, in Schubert's Heidenröslein three verses, or strophes, are set to the same melody, with no alterations to the voice part or the piano accompaniment.
- Frequency and strophe length were measured in narrow and wide band modes, respectively.
- Most celebrated were the Epodes, songs in simple strophes usually made up of a hexameter or iambic trimeter plus one or two shorter cola.
- We measured song repertoire size as the number of different song figures in 25 consecutive song strophes.
- 1.1 A structural division of a poem containing stanzas of varying line-length, especially an ode or free verse poem.
Example sentencesExamples - He believes that the syllable count of poetic lines, strophes, stanzas, and poems was essential to the writing of biblical poetry.
- The order in strophe one appears in stanza two as 6 i, 5 2, 4 3.
- Fourthly, there is a subtle, but powerful alliteration in the fourth line of the second strophe, ‘Amidst an ocean full of flying fishes’.
- The poem's initial strophe is careful, slow-moving, tonally sophisticated, and somewhat puzzling.
- The poem's closing strophe shows how Kaufman had become a master in capturing the lyrical qualities of the music and bringing them to bear in his poetry.
- Her specific topics are seen as well in the first strophe, along with a judgment of the quality of her voice.
- The most usual skaldic metre is ‘dróttkvaett ’, a strophe which consists of eight six-syllable lines, each ending in a trochee.
- An ‘aria’ was distinguished from a ‘madrigal’ in having a strophic text, with the same music, or a variation of it, set to each strophe.
- Syllabic verse is generally organized in four-line strophes, whereas the number of lines in a rosc passage is not fixed.
- In some strophes of the poem I tried to depict the tempest, followed by the calm of the sea.
- It deals with the time factor employed in or between lines or units or strophes of poetry.
- Such are the strophes exchanged between America's intellectual divinities.
- There are surreal poems like ‘Battle Report,’ with its opening strophe.
- Though the poems were in a European habit, Bialik imbues them with Biblical strophes, as well as prophetic metaphor, syntax, and meter.
OriginEarly 17th century: from Greek strophē, literally ‘turning’, from strephein ‘to turn’: the term originally denoted a movement from right to left made by a Greek chorus, or lines of choral song recited during this. |