One foot in a line
Else clues• King Lear\'s foot
• To be, e.g.
• 20% of pentameter's feet
• A foot in a line
• Anapest cousin
• Anapest relative
• Arose
• Bard's foot
• Beat in poetry
• Blank-verse foot
• Byron's foot?
• Certain foot
• da-DAH
• Da-dum
• Donne's foot
• Foot
• Foot for Browning
• Foot for Frost
• Foot in a line
• Foot in a meter
• Foot in a poem
• Foot in a sonnet
• Foot of a poet
• Foot of verse
• Foot that's part of a meter
• Foot type
• Foot, to a poet
• Frost's foot
• Frost's foot, perhaps
• Hamlet's To be, e.g.
• Hamlet's To be, for one
• Kind of poetic foot
• Limerick unit
• Literary foot
• Longfellow's foot
• Metric foot
• Metric unit
• Not-so-big foot?
• Ogden Nash's foot
• One fifth of Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
• One foot
• One foot, to a poet
• One of seven in a fourteener
• One-quarter of Whose woods these are I think I know
• Part of a meter
• Part of a meter, maybe
• Part of a Shakespearean verse, often
• Pentameter component
• Petrarchan unit
• Piece of poetry
• Poem unit
• Poet's foot
• Poetic measure
• Poetic meter
• Poetic meter unit
• Prosodic foot
• Relative of an anapest
• Rhythm unit
• Rhythmic foot
• Rubaiyat bit
• Shakespeare's 'To be,' for example
• Shakespeare's foot
• Shelley's foot
• Short-long foot
• Small foot
• Songwriter's poetic meter
• Sonnet measure
• Sonnet part
• Sonnet unit
• Sonneteer's unit
• Trochee's relative
• Two-syllable foot
• Two-syllable poetic foot
• Two-syllable poetic unit
• Unstressed-stressed foot
• Vermont but not New Hampshire, e.g.?
• Verse foot
• A metrical unit with unstressed-stressed syllables