Definitions for "Clerihew" Add To Word List
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a witty satiric verse containing two rhymed couplets and mentioning a famous person.
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a comic verse consisting of two couplets and a specific rhyming scheme, usually aabb
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a four line comic verse of two rhyming couplets
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a four-line humorous verse about a well-known person
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a four line rhymed poem with no definite meter
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a humorous pseudo-biographical quatrain, rhymed as two couplets, with lines of uneven length more or less in the rhythm of prose
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a humorous verse , rather similar to a limerick , that generally uses the name of a well known person at the end of the first or second line
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a quatrain comprising two couplets (aabb)
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a short, humorous poem about a famous person with a funny name
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a light verse form invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley, and seen from time to time in the pages of The Enigma. A clerihew is a quatrain rhyming aabb, usually with a person's name as (or sometimes ending) the first line. The charm of a clerihew lies in the clumsiness of the meter, the grotesqueness of the rhymes, and often the incongruity of the plot.
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A form of light verse devised by Edmund Clerihew Bentley. It consists of a quatrain composed of two couplets (rhymed: a-a-b-b) and takes as its subject a well known person(s) e.g. The meaning of the poet Gay Was always as clear as day, While that of the poet Blake Was often practically opaque.
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A Clerihew (or clerihew) is a very specific kind of short biographical humorous verse.
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