| 8. | Haiku | ||
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A short poem where as the first line has 5 syllables, the second has 7 and the last has 5. This form of poetry does not have to, and rarely does make sense. Haikus are random
They rarely make any sense El Chupacabra |
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| 1. | Haiku | ||
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A Japanese form of poetry used by lazy people. Haiku example:
I like potatoes They are yummy and filling Five more syllables |
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| 2. | Haiku | ||
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A type of Japanese poetry always 3 lines in length. The lines always have 5, 7, and 5 syllables. Haiku usually focuses on highly evocative allusions and comparisons, often on the subject of nature or one of the seasons.
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| 3. | haiku | ||
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Haiku are strictly about nature. All of the definitions posted here are incorrect, those are senryu, which are haiku that do not deal with nature. HAIKU:
Whispering softly Willow trees in the winter Sway in the cold wind. SENRYU: I have a big cock It is much bigger than yours Yours is just too small |
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| 4. | haiku | ||
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A strict form of Japanese poetry consisting of 3 lines.
Format: First Line 5 Syllables Second Line 7 Syllables Third Line 5 Syllables A cow's in the field,
It knows not what is to come. Rare or medium? |
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| 5. | haiku | ||
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Haikus have three lines.
The first has five syllables, Then seven, then five. Proper haikus are about nature, especially the seasons; the structure tends to be more important than the words. A haiku:
Underneath a tree Summer air is so easy. So is yo mama. |
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| 6. | haiku | ||
| 7. | Haiku | ||
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A form of poetry that has a certain format. The format of the poem is, the first line 5 syllables, the second 7 syllables and the third 5 syllables Haiku About Valley Forge
Washington is cold I kept his mother real warm I'm his new daddy |
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