Decasyllabic assonanced couplets: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 22:14, 1 August 2005

In poetry decasyllabic assonanced couplets refers to a series of paired lines (couplets) with ten syllables each (decasyllabic) that assonate with each other (i.e. the last syllables sound similar without necessarily being a strict rhyme). Decasyllabic assonanced couplets were used in the Chanson de William.