Other Definitions
trochee (dict)

Trochee

A trochee is a metrical foot used in formal poetry. It consists of a long syllable followed by a short one. Apart from the famous case of Longfellow's Hiawatha, this metre is rare in English verse, except with an extra long syllable added to each line, as in this example from Tennyson:
Go not, happy day,
From the shining fields;
Go not, happy day,
Till the maiden yields.
Perhaps owing to its simplicity, though, trochaic meter is fairly common in children's rhymes:
Peter, Peter pumpkin-eater
Had a wife and couldn't keep her.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star
How I wonder what you are.
Often a few trochees will be interspersed among iambs in the same lines to develop a more complex or syncopated rhythm. Compare (William Blake):
Tyger, Tyger, burning bright
In the forests of the night
These lines are primarily trochaic, with the last syllable dropped so that the line ends with a stressed syllable to give a strong rhyme or masculine rhyme. By contrast, the intuitive way that the mind groups the syllables in later lines in the same poem makes them feel more like iambic lines with the first syllable dropped:
Did he smile his work to see?
In fact the surrounding lines by this point have become entirely iambic:
And when the stars threw down their spears
And watered Heaven with their tears
. . .
Did he who made the lamb make thee?
See Good King Wenceslas.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
mythology in literature
london, midland and scottish railway
grnet
gustave caillebotte
lenz's law
sex in advertising
madras (cloth)
america's promise
certified public accountant
joseph henry
one foot in the north
life magazine
lost cause
advanced packaging tool
mci communications
dpkg
twelfth apostle
graven image
pyrrhic
glad to get away
white box requiem
stormix
carson daly
sefer yetzirah
tribrach
1988 winter olympics
pomona college
rest
theories of the origin of humans
horn, austria
life span
battle of goodwin sands
katrin cartlidge
sten sture the younger
erik trolle
svante sture
hermann weyl
sten sture the elder
kettil karlsson (vasa)
telegraph key
i woke up
ba
new town (album)
smile