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Hexameter
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== Classical hexameter == {{main|Dactylic hexameter}} In classical hexameter, the six feet follow these rules: * A foot can be made up of two long syllables {{nobr|(β β),}} a [[spondee]]; or a long and two short syllables, a [[Dactyl (poetry)|dactyl]] {{nobr|(β βͺβͺ).}} * The first four feet can contain either one of them. * The fifth is almost always a dactyl, and last must be a spondee / [[trochee]] (together forming an [[adonic]]). Exceptions can occur when a polysyllabic (especially Greek) name ends a verse. A short syllable (βͺ) is a syllable with a short vowel and no consonant at the end. A long syllable (β) is a syllable that either has a long vowel, one or more consonants at the end (or a [[Gemination|long consonant]]), or both. Spaces between words are not counted in syllabification, so for instance ''"cat"'' is a long syllable (β) if said in isolation, but ''"cat attack"'' in combination would be syllabified as short-short-long: ''"ca", "ta", "tack"'' {{nobr|(βͺβͺ β).}} Variations of the sequence from line to line, as well as the use of [[caesura]] (logical full stops within the line) are essential in avoiding what may otherwise be a monotonous sing-song effect.
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