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strophe

[ UK /stɹˈɒf/ ]
NOUN
  1. one section of a lyric poem or choral ode in classical Greek drama

How To Use strophe In A Sentence

  • Drastic changes are needed if environmental catastrophe is to be avoided.
  • If the contract is cancelled, it'll be a catastrophe for everyone concerned.
  • The first is the back-and-forth meandering pattern known as boustrophedon.
  • They love the series and some whitehats tell em they gotta do it in three movies and some bullshit tv series..which most likely wouldnt be hbo or the like they cancelled deadwood in three seasons because it was too expensive to produce. network tv adaptation would be a catastrophe and blasphamy..they deny it probably out of respect. Ron Howard to direct DARK TOWER movie trilogy
  • The worst hit areas are now engaged in the biggest post-catastrophe reconstruction programme since the Second World War.
  • We have no low buffoonery in the former, such as disgraces Enobarbus, and is hardly redeemed by his affecting catastrophe. The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 05
  • With the help of catastrophe criterion, the anomalism criterions of the crossfeed between dam body and foundation are acquired from the real contact area or fractal dimension curve vs.
  • You'd better take along a first-aid kit to cope with unexpected catastrophes.
  • It was written on ostrich skin in the boustrophedon style, in which one line was read from left to right and the next from right to left and so on. Deeper
  • In the original the opening strophe, which is altogether more regular than the average and is, moreover, one of the few that have also complete caesural rhyme, is as follows: The Nibelungenlied Translated into Rhymed English Verse in the Metre of the Original
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