prosody: [15] Despite the passing similarity, prosody has no etymological connection with prose. In fact, its closest English relative is ode. It comes via Latin prosōdia from Greek prosōidíā, which originally meant ‘song with an instrumental accompaniment’. This was a compound formed from prós ‘in addition to’ and ōidé ‘song’ (source of English ode [16] and also of parody [16], rhapsody, and probably tragedy). => melody, ode, parody, rhapsody
prosody (n.)
late 15c., from Latin prosodia "accent of a syllable," from Greek prosoidia "song sung to music," also "accent, modulation," literally "a singing in addition to," from pros "to, forward, near" + oide "song, poem" (see ode). Related: Prosodiacal; prosodist.
雙語(yǔ)例句
1. Both developed doctrine of prosody.
他們作詩(shī)都有自己的理論.
來(lái)自辭典例句
2. The prosody of Beowulf is based on alliteration, not end rhymes.
《貝奧武甫》的詩(shī)體采用頭韻而不用尾韻.
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3. Being of relatively great duration . Used of a syllable in prosody.
(韻律學(xué) ) 用于音節(jié)的,有較長(zhǎng)的持續(xù)時(shí)間.
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4. First, it described three models related to prosody generation.
首先描述了韻律生成的相關(guān)模型.
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5. Stressed or accented. Used of a syllable in accentual prosody.