Run-In Run-Down Run Up Run Through Run Short Run Over Run Out Run Off Run-On Runaway Runcible Spoon Rundle Rung Runnel Runner Runner-Up Running Running Board Running Hand Running Light

Run-On meaning in Urdu

Run-On Definitions

1) Run-On : جاری رہنے والا : (adjective) (verse) without a rhetorical pause between lines.

Advertisement

Useful Words


Caesura : وقف , Octave : آٹھ چیزہں کا مجموعہ , Couplet : ایک ہی طرح کے دو مصرے , Stanza : چند مصرعوں کا بند , Sonnet : بندوں کی نظم جس میں کسی خیال تصور کو پوری طرح پیش کیا گیا ہو , Herringbone : چکور خانے والا ڈیزائن , Break : وقفہ , Caesura : وقفہ , Rhetorically : خطیبانہ انداز سے , Hesitate : ہچکچانا , Letup : وقفہ , Litotes : کسی چیز کی اہمیت کم کر کے پیش کرنا , Ahem : کھنکھار , Poetise : شعر کہنا , Amphigory : بے معنی تصنیف , Mock-Heroic : بہادرانہ انداز کی نظم , Prose : عام تحریری یا تقریری زبان نثر , Pentameter : پانچ ارکان کا ایک شعر , Scansion : جائزہ لینے کا عمل , Blank Verse : غیر مقفی نظم , Alliteration : ہم آواز حرف , Acatalectic : سلییبل سے بھرا جملہ , Acrostic : سطروں کے پہلے حروف سے بننے والا لفظ , Scanner : جائزہ لینے والا , Accentual : طرز کے ساتھ , Catalectic : بے وزن , Adonic : خاص سطر , Epilog : اختتامی حصہ , Clerihew : رباعی , Belloc : انگریز مصنف , Acatalectic : مکمل مصرعہ

Useful Words Definitions


Caesura: a break or pause (usually for sense) in the middle of a verse line.

Octave: a rhythmic group of eight lines of verse.

Couplet: a stanza consisting of two successive lines of verse; usually rhymed.

Stanza: a fixed number of lines of verse forming a unit of a poem.

Sonnet: a verse form consisting of 14 lines with a fixed rhyme scheme.

Herringbone: a pattern of columns of short parallel lines with all the lines in one column sloping one way and lines in adjacent columns sloping the other way; it is used in weaving, masonry, parquetry, embroidery.

Break: a pause from doing something (as work).

Caesura: a pause or interruption (as in a conversation).

Rhetorically: in a rhetorical manner.

Hesitate: pause or hold back in uncertainty or unwillingness.

Letup: a pause during which things are calm or activities are diminished.

Litotes: understatement for rhetorical effect (especially when expressing an affirmative by negating its contrary).

Ahem: the utterance of a sound similar to clearing the throat; intended to get attention, express hesitancy, fill a pause, hide embarrassment, warn a friend, etc.

Poetise: compose verses or put into verse.

Amphigory: nonsensical writing (usually verse).

Mock-Heroic: a satirical imitation of heroic verse.

Prose: ordinary writing as distinguished from verse.

Pentameter: a verse line having five metrical feet.

Scansion: analysis of verse into metrical patterns.

Blank Verse: unrhymed verse (usually in iambic pentameter).

Alliteration: use of the same consonant at the beginning of each stressed syllable in a line of verse.

Acatalectic: (prosody) a line of verse that has the full number of syllables.

Acrostic: verse in which certain letters such as the first in each line form a word or message.

Scanner: someone who scans verse to determine the number and prosodic value of the syllables.

Accentual: (of verse) having a metric system based on stress rather than syllables or quantity.

Catalectic: (prosody) a line of verse that lacks a syllable in the last metrical foot.

Adonic: a verse line with a dactyl followed by a spondee or trochee; supposedly used in laments by Adonis.

Epilog: a short speech (often in verse) addressed directly to the audience by an actor at the end of a play.

Clerihew: a witty satiric verse containing two rhymed couplets and mentioning a famous person.

Belloc: English author (born in France) remembered especially for his verse for children (1870-1953).

Acatalectic: (verse) metrically complete; especially having the full number of syllables in the final metrical foot.

Run-OnDetailQuiz
کبھی کبھی تو آتا ہوں