英:[ˈstænzə]
美:[ˈstænzə]
英:[ˈstænzə]
美:[ˈstænzə]
stan·za
staen z
复数:stanzas
stanzaic (adj.)
noun
a division of a poem consisting of a series of lines arranged together in a usually recurring pattern of meter and rhyme : strophe
sports a period (such as a half or an inning) into which the duration of a game is divided
The game's prime moment wasn't the decisive and popular eighth-inning, two-run homer by Mark Bellhorn … but a sensational play by Boston's Manny Ramirez in the top of that same stanza.—Roger Angell
"诗歌中按长度和韵律排列的一组押韵诗句,通常作为更大作品的一部分,公元1580年代,源自意大利词语 stanza,意为“诗歌的一节”,最初意为“停留、停顿的地方”,源自通俗拉丁语词语 *stantia,意为“一节诗歌”,因其末尾有停顿而得名,源自拉丁语词语 stantem(主格 stans),现在分词形式为 stare,意为“站立”(源自 PIE 词根 *sta-,意为“站立,使稳固”)。相关词语: Stanzaic; stanzaical。
局
Italian, stay, abode, room, stanza, from Vulgar Latin *stantia stay — more at stance
The first known use of stanza was in 1589
staphnoun
staphylococcusalso: an infection with staphylococci
stapesnoun
stirrup sense 2
stanzanoun
a division of a poem consisting of a series of lines arranged together in a usually repeating pattern of rhythm and rhyme
1 The sacrifice becomes, in the last stanza, a "purifying rite" – if only for "believers in the afterlife".
2 In the opening stanzas it delicately underlines closure: choose him/ refuse him/ lose him // sound him/ found him/ around him.
3 You could, in fact, venture that some of the most consequential poetical stanzas in history came from a poem written in 1866 by Paul Verlaine.
4 Though written for three voices, this meditation on pregnancy and childbirth takes the form of poetic stanzas and lacks named characters, stage directions, dialogue – all the markers by which we recognise a text for performance.
5 The poem's first stanza tells how the speaker meets a fellow "nobody" — a friend.
这首诗的第一段描写诗人如何遇到了另一位“无名小卒”-- 一位朋友。
6 And its closing stanzas — cut into the headstone — the stark ending of one of his last poems.
7 The images in the last stanza are simple and striking.
8 Later, longer stanzas contain arcs of momentum, which the music mimics with rising lines.
9 We alternate stanzas, first Finch, then me, Finch, then me.
10 She was also inspired by Arabic calligraphy and Arabic poetry, stanzas of which traditionally are often interchangeable.
11 After leaving the theater, audience members may want to improve their acquaintance with the stanzas featured in the modern-dance and spoken-word production, which ponders the themes of love, loss, fear, passion and zest for life.
12 In the opening stanza, for instance, John’s voice comes near to cracking with despair.
13 To do this, send a presence stanza to the server.
为此,需要向服务器发送一个presence节。
14 “You’re vilifying us for six months, then you’re going to give us a little black-and-white photo of Martin Luther King, give us two stanzas from ‘I Have a Dream’ and move on,” he said.
15 But as that tight and high-minded stanza gives way to florid fantasizing —
16 Gregor and Henry had played out the last stanza of “The Prophecy of Gray.”
17 In “The Summer Tree,” published in The Christian Science Monitor in 1968, for instance, the first four stanzas employ half- and whole rhymes in alternation.
18 Over and over she played the new record Father had bought for her, imitating each sound until she was certain she could repeat a stanza.
19 This movement is intensified by the next stanza's dramatic "whirlpool of wolves".
20 There's a nice, humorous little tribute to Welsh poets in stanza three: they sing like wingless, ie human, nightingales.