jangling$529401$ - meaning and definition. What is jangling$529401$
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What (who) is jangling$529401$ - definition

FIGURE OF SPEECH
Leonine rhyme; Leonine rhymes; Leonine verses; Leonine Verse; Leonius (poet); Jangling verse
  • A detail of a watercolor by Augustus Hare showing the Latin Leonine verse inscribed on Bede's tomb.

jangle         
  • A [[Rickenbacker 360/12]], identical to the model commonly used to produce "jangly" guitar sounds in the 1960s
  • [[Roger McGuinn]] of [[the Byrds]] playing his 12-string, 1972
GUITAR TECHNIQUE
Jangles; Jangled; Jangle music; Jangle rock; Jangle punk; Jangly
v. (D; intr.) to jangle on ('to irritate') (to jangle on smb.'s nerves)
Jangle         
  • A [[Rickenbacker 360/12]], identical to the model commonly used to produce "jangly" guitar sounds in the 1960s
  • [[Roger McGuinn]] of [[the Byrds]] playing his 12-string, 1972
GUITAR TECHNIQUE
Jangles; Jangled; Jangle music; Jangle rock; Jangle punk; Jangly
Jangle or jingle-jangle is a sound typically characterized by undistorted, treble-heavy electric guitars (particularly 12-strings) played in a droning chordal style (by strumming or arpeggiating). The sound is mainly associated with pop music as well as 1960s guitar bands, folk rock, and 1980s indie music.
Leonine verse         
Leonine verse is a type of versification based on internal rhyme, and commonly used in Latin verse of the European Middle Ages. The invention of such conscious rhymes, foreign to Classical Latin poetry, is traditionally attributed to a probably apocryphal monk Leonius, who is supposed to be the author of a history of the Old Testament (Historia Sacra) preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale of Paris.

Wikipedia

Leonine verse

Leonine verse is a type of versification based on internal rhyme, and commonly used in Latin verse of the European Middle Ages. The invention of such conscious rhymes, foreign to Classical Latin poetry, is traditionally attributed to a probably apocryphal monk Leonius, who is supposed to be the author of a history of the Old Testament (Historia Sacra) preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale of Paris. This "history" is composed in Latin verses which rhyme in the center. It is possible that this Leonius is the same person as Leoninus, a Benedictine musician of the twelfth century, in which case he would not have been the original inventor of the form. It is sometimes referred to disparagingly as "jangling verse" by classical purists, for example 19th century antiquaries, who consider it absurd and coarse and a corruption of and offensive to the high ideals of classical literature.

In English, the rhyme may be between a word within the line (often before a caesura) and the word at the end. Shakespeare used it to denote absurd characters, as in the speech of Caliban in The Tempest.