limerick
See also: Limerick
WOTD – 17 March 2007
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈlɪməɹɪk/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
limerick (plural limericks)
- A humorous, often bawdy verse of five anapaestic lines, with the rhyme scheme aabba, and typically having a 9–9–6–6–9 cadence.
- Description of the limerick in limerick form:
- The limerick, it would appear,
Is a verse form we owe Edward Lear;
Two long and two short
Lines rhymed, as was taught,
And a fifth just to bring up the rear.
- The limerick, it would appear,
- 2006 May 24, Adrian Truss as Jerry Lewis and Jennifer Hale as Samantha “Sam”, “Sis-KaBOOM-Bah!”, in Totally Spies!: Undercover, season 4, episode 15, written by Rhonda Smiley, Teletoon, Marathon Media:
- Take a look. That’s Buffy, Muffy, and Fluffy.
Do they have anything in common other than names you could write a limerick around?
- Description of the limerick in limerick form:
Translations
rhyming verse of five lines
Further reading
Limerick (poetry) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Limerick (song) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Limerick (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.