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distich

noun

  1. two line strophic unit
L1080584 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈdɪstɪk/

adj

Etymology: From Latin distichon (“a poem of two verses, a distich consisting of a hexameter and a pentameter”), from Ancient Greek δίστιχον (dístikhon).

  1. Distichous.

noun

Etymology: From Latin distichon (“a poem of two verses, a distich consisting of a hexameter and a pentameter”), from Ancient Greek δίστιχον (dístikhon).

  1. A couplet, a two-line stanza making complete sense.

    Through these distichs of increasing intensity and vagueness, the reader is brought to the riddle of the concluding distich: as far as the speaker is concerned, the girl was ‘pure’, but she will not be if Aeschylus wants to receive the same service on a ‘bad condition’.

  2. Any couplet.