anapaest

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τὰ πρὸ Εὐκλείδου ἐξετάζειν → investigate what happened before the flood, investigate what happened in the distant past, investigate what happened before Euclid, investigate what happened before the year of Euclid

Source

Wikipedia EN

An anapaest (/ˈænəpiːst, -pɛst/; also spelled anapæst or anapest, also called antidactylus) is a metrical foot used in formal poetry. In classical quantitative meters it consists of two short syllables followed by a long one; in accentual stress meters it consists of two unstressed syllables followed by one stressed syllable. It may be seen as a reversed dactyl. This word comes from the Greek ἀνάπαιστος, anápaistos, literally "struck back" and in a poetic context "a dactyl reversed".

Translations

Armenian: անապեստ, վերջատանջ; Catalan: anapest; Czech: anapest; Danish: anapest; Dutch: anapest; Faroese: øvutur tríliður; Finnish: anapesti; French: anapeste; German: Anapäst; Greek: ανάπαιστος; Ancient Greek: ἀνάπαιστος; Ido: anapesto; Irish: anaipéist; Latin: anapaestus; Norwegian Bokmål: anapest; Nynorsk: anapest; Polish: anapest, antydaktyl; Portuguese: anapesto; Russian: анапест; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: ана̀пест; Roman: anàpest; Spanish: anapesto; Swedish: anapest

be_x_old: анапэст; be: анапест; bg: анапест; ca: anapest; cs: anapest; cv: анапест; da: anapæst; de: Anapäst; el: ανάπαιστος; grc: ἀνάπαιστος; en: anapaest; eo: anapesto; es: anapesto; ext: anapestu; fi: anapesti; fr: anapeste; gan: 弱弱強格; gl: anapesto; he: אנאפסט; hu: anapesztus; hy: անապեստ; io: anapesto; is: rísandi þríliður; it: anapesto; ja: アナパイストス; kk: анапест; la: anapaestus; nl: anapest; no: anapest;: anapest; pt: anapesto; ro: anapest; ru: анапест; sh: anapest; sk: anapest; sl: anapest; sq: anapesti; sv: anapest; tyv: анапест; uk: анапест