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ictus
[ik-tuhs]
noun
plural
ictuses, ictusProsody.rhythmical or metrical stress.
Pathology.
an epileptic seizure.
a stroke, especially a cerebrovascular accident.
ictus
/ ˈɪə /
noun
prosody metrical or rhythmic stress in verse feet, as contrasted with the stress accent on words
med a sudden attack or stroke
Other 51Թ Forms
- ictic adjective
- ˈٲ adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of ictus1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of ictus1
Example Sentences
Latterly, the underlying metrical ictus is at times hard to detect.
Coleridge, it is true, and Scott had employed a broken rhythm, substituting the temporal for the syllabic ictus, to vary the monotony of the eight-syllabled narrative verse.
The translator shows his good judgment when he retains the original strophe, the characteristic last half-verse with its four ictus included.
The thesis becomes a triseme if the next syllable bears the ictus.
But then it has the double ictus; and, as the word implies, is divisible into three parts, thus giving a quickness and shortness where wanted.
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