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{{Lewis | {{Lewis | ||
|lshtext=<b>antĭbacchīus</b>: i, adj., = | |lshtext=<b>antĭbacchīus</b>: i, adj., = [[ἀντιβακχεῖος]].<br /><b>I</b> Pes, a poetical [[foot]], the [[antibacchius]], [[antibacchus]] or [[reversed]] [[Bacchius]], ˘¯¯ (e. g. nĕpō tēs), Ter. Maur. p. 2414 P. (acc. to [[other]] ¯¯˘).—<br /><b>II</b> Versus, a [[verse]] [[composed]] of this [[foot]], Diom. p. 513 P.; called palimbac chius by Quint. 9, 4, 82; Isid. Orig. 1, 16, p. 30 Lind. | ||
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{{Gaffiot | {{Gaffiot | ||
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{{Georges | {{Georges | ||
|georg=antibacchīus, a, um ( | |georg=antibacchīus, a, um ([[ἀντιβάκχειος]]), antibacchisch, ant. [[pes]], [[ein]] dreisilbiges Versglied: ñ–– ([[ein]] umgekehrter [[Bacchius]]), Gramm, -ant. [[versus]], [[ein]] aus Antibacchien bestehender [[Vers]], Gramm. | ||
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==Wikipedia EN== | |||
An antibacchius is a rare metrical foot used in formal poetry. In accentual-syllabic verse an antibacchius consists of two accented syllables followed by one unaccented syllable. Its opposite is a bacchius. |