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cywydd
[ kuh-with ]
noun
Prosody.
- a form of meter in Welsh poetry consisting of rhyming couplets, each line having seven syllables: first used in the 14th century.
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of cywydd1
1950鈥55; < Welsh; Old Welsh couid song, metrical composition; cognate with Old Irish cubaid harmonious, rhyming
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
His poems were almost all written in the cywydd form: a short ode not divided into stanzas, each line having the same number of syllables.
From
The masterpiece of Buchanan is his La Breitheanas or Day of Judgment, which is equal in merit, or nearly so, to the Cywydd y Farn or Judgment Day of your own immortal Gronwy Owen.聽
From
All his pieces are excellent, but his masterwork is decidedly the 鈥淐ywydd y Farn鈥 or 鈥淒ay of Judgment.鈥
From
Each particular species of englyn, cywydd, and awdl has its appropriate name, which it is needless to give here.聽
From
All his pieces are excellent, but his master-work is decidedly the Cywydd y Farn, or Day of Judgment.聽
From
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