Talk:Glossary of poetry terms

Latest comment: 3 years ago by Adam1729 in topic Short/long and stressed/unstressed
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2007-02-1 Automated pywikipediabot message edit

--CopyToWiktionaryBot 16:14, 1 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Merge suggestion edit

IMO the List of basic poetry topics is an unnecessary POV fork of Glossary of poetry terms: who says that some topics are basic and more importantly, why we need a list of "basic"? Mukadderat 19:47, 2 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

The Lists of basic topics are a set of lists that serve as a table of contents system for Wikipedia. It is used by a lot of people and shouldn't be dismantled. Removing its poetry subject will create a gap in that system's coverage. The intended scope of the two pages is different, and this glossary may eventually grow to be much more comprehensive. The list of basic poetry topics is intended to remain fundamental (introductory level, providing an overview of the subject in a standard cheat sheet format). The Transhumanist (talk) 07:27, 25 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Clean up edit

This glossary was more like a mere list than a glossary. Therefore I moved the non-glossary entries to a wish list section below until definitions are added to them. The Transhumanist (talk) 07:27, 25 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Wish list: terms needing definitions edit

The following items were moved here from the glossary page, because they lack definitions. Once you've added a definition to a term, please move it back the glossary page.

Short/long and stressed/unstressed edit

The article currently says:

Below, "short/long" definitions of a syllable of classical languages correspond to "stressed/unstressed" of English language.

Surely this should be:

Below, "short/long" definitions of a syllable of classical languages correspond to "unstressed/stressed" (respectively) of English language.

But I don't know enough about the subject to be sure. Adam1729 (talk) 06:59, 11 February 2021 (UTC)Reply

Technical means edit

Tropes edit

Types of line edit

Verse forms edit

Periods, styles and movements edit

For movements see List of poetry groups and movements.