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Caesural

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cae·su·ra also ce·su·ra  (s-zhr, -zr)
n. pl. cae·su·ras also ce·su·ras or cae·su·rae also ce·su·rae (-zhr, -zr)
1. A pause in a line of verse dictated by sense or natural speech rhythm rather than by metrics.
2. A pause or interruption, as in conversation: After another weighty caesura the senator resumed speaking.
3. In Latin and Greek prosody, a break in a line caused by the ending of a word within a foot, especially when this coincides with a sense division.
4. Music A pause or breathing at a point of rhythmic division in a melody.

[Latin caesra, a cutting, from caesus, past participle of caedere, to cut off; see ka-id- in Indo-European roots.]

cae·sural, cae·suric adj.
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Adj.1.caesural - of or relating to a caesura


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After a caesural intermission, the poem returns to the ants' world, ensconcing the speaker's emotions.
From the caesura in his surname (which creates its own puzzle and foils assumptions of a Scottish heritage) to the six-decade output of delightfully improbable, sometimes neologistic vocabularies, chance-determined (or not) caesural silences, and lettristic, phonemic, and other kinds of sonic and visual play that combined intentionality and indeterminacy, Mac Low's brilliance and humor both augmented and complicated linguistic geometries of attention.
Most of us now accept that Shakespeare's metrics change over his career and that counts of simple features like caesural pause, enjambment, and unstressed endings reliably chart this variation.
 
 
 
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