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Verse

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A verse is formally a single metrical line in a poetic composition . However, verse has come to represent any grouping of lines in a poetic composition, with groupings traditionally having been referred to as stanzas .

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29-732: (Redirected from Verses ) [REDACTED] Look up verse in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Verse may refer to: Poetry [ edit ] Verse (poetry) , a line or lines in a poetic composition Blank verse , a type of poetry having regular meter but no rhyme Free verse , a type of poetry written without the use of strict meter or rhyme, but still recognized as poetry Versed (poetry collection) , 2009 collection of poetry by Rae Armantrout Verse , an international poetry journal with Henry Hart (author) as founding editor Religion [ edit ] Chapters and verses of

58-497: A mass noun , uncountable noun , non-count noun , uncount noun , or just uncountable , is a noun with the syntactic property that any quantity of it is treated as an undifferentiated unit, rather than as something with discrete elements. Uncountable nouns are distinguished from count nouns . Given that different languages have different grammatical features , the actual test for which nouns are mass nouns may vary between languages. In English , mass nouns are characterized by

87-589: A measure word to be quantified. Some quantifiers are specific to mass nouns (e.g., an amount of ) or count nouns (e.g., a number of , every ). Others can be used with both types (e.g., a lot of , some ). Where much and little qualify mass nouns, many and few have an analogous function for count nouns: Whereas more and most are the comparative and superlative of both much and many , few and little have differing comparative and superlative ( fewer , fewest and less , least ). However, suppletive use of less and least with count nouns

116-499: A partitive case , the distinction is explicit and mandatory. For example, in Finnish , join vettä , "I drank (some) water", the word vesi , "water", is in the partitive case. The related sentence join veden , "I drank (the) water", using the accusative case instead, assumes that there was a specific countable portion of water that was completely drunk. The work of logicians like Godehard Link and Manfred Krifka established that

145-404: A 2002 album by Patricia Barber Ben Mount (born 1977), also known as The Verse or MC Verse, British rapper, producer and record label owner "Verses", a commonly used unofficial title for a studio outtake by Cardiacs included on Toy World Other uses [ edit ] Jared Verse (born 2000), American football player Verse (film) , a 2009 Bolivian film Verse protocol ,

174-406: A house , for example the bathroom, or the entrance door, is itself a house. Similarly, no proper part of a man , say his index finger, or his knee, can be described as a man . Hence, house and man have quantized reference. However, collections of cutlery do have proper parts that can themselves be described as cutlery . Hence cutlery does not have quantized reference. Notice again that this

203-610: A lexical specification for mass-count status, and instead are specified as such only when used in a sentence. Nouns differ in the extent to which they can be used flexibly, depending largely on their meanings and the context of use. For example, the count noun "house" is difficult to use as mass (though clearly possible), and the mass noun "cutlery" is most frequently used as mass, despite the fact that it denotes objects, and has count equivalents in other languages: In some languages, such as Chinese and Japanese , it has been claimed by some that all nouns are effectively mass nouns, requiring

232-431: A networking protocol allowing real-time communication between computer graphics software Verse (river) , a river of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Verse (programming language) , a functional logic programming language developed by Epic Games See also [ edit ] Versus (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

261-551: A proper part which is itself a committee. Hence this expression is not quantized. It is not cumulative, either: the sum of two separate committees is not necessarily a committee . In terms of the mass/count distinction, committee behaves like a count noun. By some accounts, these examples are taken to indicate that the best characterization of mass nouns is that they are cumulative nouns . On such accounts, count nouns should then be characterized as non-cumulative nouns: this characterization correctly groups committee together with

290-409: A substance ("Two waters , please") or of several types/varieties (" waters of the world"). One may say that mass nouns that are used as count nouns are " countified " and that count ones that are used as mass nouns are " massified ". However, this may confuse syntax and semantics, by presupposing that words which denote substances are mass nouns by default. According to many accounts, nouns do not have

319-451: Is a mass noun as a material ( three reams of paper , one sheet of paper ), but a count noun as a unit of writing ("the students passed in their papers"). In English (and in many other languages), there is a tendency for nouns referring to liquids ( water , juice ), powders ( sugar , sand ), or substances ( metal , wood ) to be used in mass syntax, and for nouns referring to objects or people to be count nouns. But there are many exceptions:

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348-464: Is a property of the sum of x and y . Consider, for example cutlery : If one collection of cutlery is combined with another, we still have "cutlery." Similarly, if water is added to water, we still have "water." But if a chair is added to another, we do not have "a chair", but rather two chairs. Thus the nouns "cutlery" and "water" have cumulative reference, while the expression "a chair" does not. The expression "chairs", however, does, suggesting that

377-507: Is common in many contexts, some of which attract criticism as nonstandard or low- prestige . This criticism dates back to at least 1770; the usage dates back to Old English . In 2008, Tesco changed supermarket checkout signs reading "Ten items or less" after complaints that it was bad grammar; at the suggestion of the Plain English Campaign it switched to "Up to ten items" rather than to "Ten items or fewer". There

406-500: Is historically the most commonly used form of verse in English. It generally has a discernible meter and an end rhyme.     I felt a Cleaving in my Mind –     As if my Brain had split –     I tried to match it – Seam by Seam –     But could not make them fit.     The thought behind, I strove to join     Unto

435-515: Is often confusion about the two different concepts of collective noun and mass noun . Generally, collective nouns such as group, family , and committee are not mass nouns but are rather a special subset of count nouns . However, the term "collective noun" is often used to mean "mass noun" (even in some dictionaries) because users conflate two different kinds of verb number invariability: (a) that seen with mass nouns such as "water" or "furniture", with which only singular verb forms are used because

464-750: Is poetry written in regular, metrical, but unrhymed, lines, almost always composed of iambic pentameters .     Of man's first disobedience, and the fruit     Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste     Brought death into the world, and all our woe,     With loss of Eden, till one greater man     ....                                               — John Milton (from Paradise Lost ) Free verse

493-415: Is probably not a fact about mass-count syntax, but about prototypical examples, since many singular count nouns have referents whose proper parts can be described by the same term. Examples include divisible count nouns like "rope", "string", "stone", "tile", etc. Some expressions are neither quantized nor cumulative. Examples of this include collective nouns like committee . A committee may well contain

522-512: Is used as a mass noun. The names of animals, such as "chicken", "fox" or "lamb" are count when referring to the animals themselves, but are mass when referring to their meat, fur, or other substances produced by them. (e.g., "I'm cooking chicken tonight" or "This coat is made of fox.") Conversely, " fire " is frequently used as a mass noun, but "a fire" refers to a discrete entity. Substance terms like "water" which are frequently used as mass nouns, can be used as count nouns to denote arbitrary units of

551-745: Is usually defined as having no fixed meter and no end rhyme. Although free verse may include end rhyme, it commonly does not.     Whirl up, sea—     Whirl your pointed pines     Splash your great pines     On our rocks,     Hurl your green over us,     Cover us with your pools of fir.                                               — H.D. Mass noun In linguistics ,

580-566: The Bible Ayah , one of the 6,236 verses found in the Qur'an Music [ edit ] Verse (band) , a hardcore punk band Verse (rapper) (b. 1986), British hip hop artist Verse (popular music) , roughly corresponds to a poetic stanza Verses (album) , a 1987 album by jazz trumpeter Wallace Roney Verses (Apallut) , a 2001 album by the Alaskan group Pamyua Verse ,

609-593: The count nouns. If, instead, we had chosen to characterize count nouns as quantized nouns , and mass nouns as non-quantized ones, then we would (incorrectly) be led to expect committee to be a mass noun. However, as noted above, such a characterization fails to explain many central phenomena of the mass-count distinction. Many English nouns can be used in either mass or count syntax, and in these cases, they take on cumulative reference when used as mass nouns. For example, one may say that "there's apple in this sauce", and then apple has cumulative reference, and, hence,

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638-749: The different quantifiers "much" and "many"). Mass nouns have no concept of singular and plural , although in English they take singular verb forms . However, many mass nouns in English can be converted to count nouns, which can then be used in the plural to denote (for instance) more than one instance or variety of a certain sort of entity – for example, " Many cleaning agents today are technically not soaps [i.e. types of soap], but detergents, " or " I drank about three beers [i.e. bottles or glasses of beer] ". Some nouns can be used indifferently as mass or count nouns, e.g. , three cabbages or three heads of cabbage ; three ropes or three lengths of rope . Some have different senses as mass and count nouns: paper

667-421: The generalization is not actually specific to the mass-count distinction. As many have noted, it is possible to provide an alternative analysis, by which mass nouns and plural count nouns are assigned a similar semantics, as distinct from that of singular count nouns. An expression P has quantized reference if and only if, for any X: This can be seen to hold in the case of the noun house : no proper part of

696-466: The impossibility of being directly modified by a numeral without specifying a unit of measurement and by the impossibility of being combined with an indefinite article ( a or an ). Thus, the mass noun "water" is quantified as "20 litres of water" while the count noun "chair" is quantified as "20 chairs". However, both mass and count nouns can be quantified in relative terms without unit specification (e.g., "so much water", "so many chairs", though note

725-463: The mass/count distinction can be given a precise, mathematical definition in terms of quantization and cumulativity . An expression P has cumulative reference if and only if for any X and Y : In more formal terms (Krifka 1998): which may be read as: X is cumulative if there exists at least one pair x,y , where x and y are distinct, and both have the property X , and if for all possible pairs x and y fitting that description, X

754-539: The mass/count distinction is a property of the terms , not their referents. For example, the same set of chairs can be referred to as "seven chairs" (count) and as "furniture" (mass); the Middle English mass noun pease has become the count noun pea by morphological reanalysis ; "vegetables" are a plural count form, while the British English slang synonym "veg" is a mass noun. In languages that have

783-446: The thought before –     But Sequence ravelled out of Sound     Like Balls – upon a Floor.                                               — Emily Dickinson Blank verse

812-452: The title Verse . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Verse&oldid=1194339245 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Verse (poetry) Verse in

841-406: The uncountable ( mass noun ) sense refers to poetry in contrast to prose . Where the common unit of verse is based on meter or rhyme , the common unit of prose is purely grammatical, such as a sentence or paragraph . Verse in the second sense is also used pejoratively in contrast to poetry to suggest work that is too pedestrian or too incompetent to be classed as poetry. Rhymed verse

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