| 释义 | 
		Definition of heptameter in English: heptameternounhɛpˈtamɪtəhɛpˈtæmədər Prosody A line of verse consisting of seven metrical feet. 〔诗韵〕七韵诗行 Example sentencesExamples -  Poems written in heptameter tend to jog along and are usually comic in character.
 -  One of my goals, then, is to put students in a position to ask, ‘Why did Wordsworth choose a heptameter line for this poem?’
 -  Hexameters, for example, are difficult to handle, and heptameters are apt to break into two lines of four and three stresses each, the so-called ballad metre.
 -  Iambic heptameters, known as ‘fourteeners’ from their syllabic count, were employed by a number of poets in the 15th and 16th centuries, for example in Chapman's translation of Homer.
 -  The heptameter is often used in writing ballads, and is indeed frequently known as ‘the ballad line’.
 
 
 OriginLate 19th century: via late Latin from Greek heptametron, from hepta- 'seven' + metron 'measure'. Rhymesdiameter, hexameter, parameter, pentameter, tetrameter    Definition of heptameter in US English: heptameternounhɛpˈtæmədərhepˈtamədər Prosody A line of verse consisting of seven metrical feet. 〔诗韵〕七韵诗行 Example sentencesExamples -  One of my goals, then, is to put students in a position to ask, ‘Why did Wordsworth choose a heptameter line for this poem?’
 -  Iambic heptameters, known as ‘fourteeners’ from their syllabic count, were employed by a number of poets in the 15th and 16th centuries, for example in Chapman's translation of Homer.
 -  The heptameter is often used in writing ballads, and is indeed frequently known as ‘the ballad line’.
 -  Poems written in heptameter tend to jog along and are usually comic in character.
 -  Hexameters, for example, are difficult to handle, and heptameters are apt to break into two lines of four and three stresses each, the so-called ballad metre.
 
 
 OriginLate 19th century: via late Latin from Greek heptametron, from hepta- ‘seven’ + metron ‘measure’.     |