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Entries linking to strophe

4 entries found.

"group of rhymed verse lines arranged in fixed sequence as to length and metrics," normally forming a division in a larger work, 1580s, from Italian stanza "verse of a poem," originally "standing, stopping place," from Vulgar Latin *stantia "a stanza of verse," so called from the stop at the end of it, from Latin stantem (nominative stans), present participle of stare "to stand" (from PIE root *sta- "to stand, make or be firm"). Related: Stanzaic; stanzaical.

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"of or pertaining to a strophe or strophes," 1810, from strophe + -ic. Related: Strophical.

before vowels strept-, word-forming element used in science to mean "twisted; in the form of a chain," from Latinized combining form of Greek streptos "twisted, flexible, easy to bend, pliant," as a noun, "a necklace, a curl," verbal adjective of strephein "to turn, twist, wind."

Greek strophē "a twisting, turning around" is another variant from strephein. The verb is generally reconstructed to be from PIE root *streb(h)- "to wind, turn." But Beekes writes that "The root has no Indo-European cognates," and he compares streblos "turned, twisted, crooked, cunning," which he suggests is of Pre-Greek origin.

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to wind, turn."

It might form all or part of: anastrophe; antistrophe; apostrophe (n.1); apostrophe (n.2); boustrophedon; catastrophe; epistrophe; strabismus; strap; strep; strepto-; streptococcus; streptomycin; strobe; strobic; stroboscope; strop; strophe; strophic.

It might also be the source of: Greek strophe "stanza," originally "a turning," strephein "to turn," strophaligs "whirl, whirlwind," streblos "twisted," stremma "that which is twisted."

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