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    Published by Reference Series Books LLC Mai 2018, 2018

    ISBN 10: 1156566479ISBN 13: 9781156566473

    Seller: BuchWeltWeit Ludwig Meier e.K., Bergisch Gladbach, Germany

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    Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. This item is printed on demand - it takes 3-4 days longer - Neuware -Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 93. Chapters: Onomatopoeia, Poetic form, Elegiac couplet, Ballad, Wah-wah, Villanelle, Rhyme, Pantoum, Heroic couplet, Ode, Waka, Clerihew, Free verse, Stanza, Quatorzain, The Meaning of Liff, Strophe, Antistrophe, Sandhi, Epode, Blowing a raspberry, Elegy, Ghazal, Blank verse, Cross-linguistic onomatopoeias, Shamanic music, Sound symbolism, Saturnian, Cellar door, Inherently funny word, Imitation of sounds in shamanism, Sijo, Bling-bling, Stichomythia, Hainteny, Sound mimesis in various cultures, Tanka prose, Fixed verse, Phonestheme, Décima, L¿c bát, Japanese sound symbolism, Chastushka, Sound poetry, Envoi, Gogyoka, Bouts-Rimés, List of animal sounds, Rhyme royal, Carmen, Cumulative tale, Heroic verse, Zaum, Chant royal, Pantun, Kachi-kachi Yama, Cumulative song, Beep, beep, Bamf, Tanaga, Skolion, Oríkì, Paradelle, Blason, Anacreontics, English and Welsh, Song That Luc Bat, Copla, Kuchi shoga, Cobla, Roundel, Sestet, Hudibrastic, Terzanelle, Olonkho, Slavic antithesis, Balliol rhyme, Bow-wow theory, Ragale, Palinode, Sisindiran, Tweede Asem, Zyzzyx, Virelai nouveau, Pentina, Sevenling, Synchysis, Antilabe, Bref double, Syair, Recueillement, Thanbauk, Canto, Arlabecca, Connected speech, Kantan Chamorrita, Quaternion, Monostich, Poetic closure, Action, Pathya Vat, Silva, Humdrum and Harum-Scarum, Yadu, Quinzaine, Poetic Meter and Poetic Form, Dodoitsu, Balwo, Nonnet, Stichic, Closed form, Tristich. Excerpt: Because of the nature of onomatopoeia, there are many cross-linguistic cognates of onomatopoetic sounds. The following is a list of some conventional examples: This may differ according to the species of frog common in each language's speech area. A sign in a shop window in Italy proclaims 'No Tic Tac'. Thunderstorm Waka (¿¿, literally 'Japanese poem') or Yamato uta is a genre of classical Japanese verse and one of the major genres of Japanese literature. The term was coined during the Heian period, and was used to distinguish Japanese-language poetry from kanshi (poetry written in Chinese by Japanese poets), and later from renga. The term waka originally encompassed a number of differing forms, principally tanka (¿¿, 'short poem') and choka (¿¿, 'long poem'), but also including bussokusekika, sedoka (¿¿¿, 'memorized poem') and katauta (¿¿, 'poem fragment'). These last three forms, however, fell into disuse at the beginning of the Heian period, and choka vanished soon afterwards. Thus, the term waka came in time to refer only to tanka. Japanese poet and critic Masaoka Shiki created the term tanka in the early twentieth century for his statement that waka should be renewed and modernized. Until then, poems of this nature had been referred to as waka or simply uta ('song, poem'). Haiku is also a term of his invention, used for his revision of standalone hokku, with the same idea. Traditionally waka in general has had no concept of rhyme (indeed, certain arrangements of rhymes, even accidental, were considered dire faults in a poem), or even of line. Instead of lines, waka has the unit (¿) and the phrase (¿). (Units or phrases are often turned into lines when poetry is translated or transliterated into Western languages, however.) Choka consists of 5-7 Japanese sound units phrases repeated at least twice, and concludes with a 5-7-7 ending. The briefest choka documented was made by Yamanoue no Okura in the Nara period, and goes: ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿ 94 pp. Englisch.