stave-rhyme
Appearance
See also: stave rhyme
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Most likely a calque of a Germanic term, such as German Stabreim or Danish stavrim.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]stave-rhyme (usually uncountable, plural stave-rhymes)
- (countable) A (stressed) word that rhymes with another, in that it begins with the same consonant, consonant cluster, or vowel.
- The poem is littered with stave-rhymes like "start, stop".
- 1860, George Stephens, Two leaves of king Waldere's lay, a hitherto unknown Old-English epic, page 72:
- It is better to retain it in this line, as it is one of the 3 stave-rhymes.
- 2001, Altaic affinities: proceedings of the 40th meeting of the Permanent International Altaistic Conference (PIAC), Provo, Utah (1997), page 268:
- c) MNT I 58 stave-rhymes (har/am; qat/qa) and near stave-rhymes (qu/qa) in the first five words, twofold genuine stave-rhyme (ö & ki) with grammatical assonant end-rhyme (söl/sal & sön/san) in the parallel phrases on revenge
- 2005, György Kara, Books of the Mongolian nomads: more than eight centuries of writing Mongolian, page 277:
- The colophon penned in flowery style with stave-rhymes relates that the words of the Zaya Pandita's translation were written […]
- (usually uncountable) This kind of rhyme.
- The poem exhibits stave-rhyme.
- 1860, George Stephens, Two leaves of king Waldere's lay, a hitherto unknown Old-English epic, page 22:
- Our ancestors grounded their verse on stave-rhyme and accent […]
- 1877, Daniel Henry Haigh, “On Runic Inscriptions Discovered at Thornhill”, in The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, volume 4, page 420:
- Now, of the Thornhill fragments, those I have numbered VII. give us part of an epitaph in stave-rhyme, conceived on the same plan as those at Dewsbury and Falstone, but with a remarkable variation; […]
- 2001, Altaic affinities: proceedings of the 40th meeting of the Permanent International Altaistic Conference (PIAC), Provo, Utah (1997), page 268:
- c) MNT I 58 stave-rhymes (har/am; qat/qa) and near stave-rhymes (qu/qa) in the first five words, twofold genuine stave-rhyme (ö & ki) with grammatical assonant end-rhyme (söl/sal & sön/san) in the parallel phrases on revenge
Synonyms
[edit]- (broadly speaking) alliteration
Hypernyms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]word which rhymes
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kind of rhyme
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Verb
[edit]stave-rhyme (third-person singular simple present stave-rhymes, present participle stave-rhyming, simple past and past participle stave-rhymed)
- To exhibit this kind of rhyme.
- 1995, John M. Jeep, Alliterating word-pairs in Old High German, page 35:
- Richard Kienast, in a study of the prose style of the Old High German Isidor translation, remarked that the relics of elevated celebratory composition, as the ‘stave-rhyming formulas’ were described, need to be treated.
- 2002, Irmengard Rauch, Gerald F. Carr, editors, New insights in Germanic linguistics III, page 120:
- To find other Old High German parallels, it is necessary to include those genres which are not composed in stave-rhyming verse.
Synonyms
[edit]- (broadly speaking) alliterate
Translations
[edit]to exhibit this kind of rhyme
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See also
[edit]Categories:
- English terms calqued from Germanic languages
- English terms derived from Germanic languages
- English 2-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English countable nouns
- English multiword terms
- English terms with usage examples
- English terms with quotations
- English verbs