Sapphic vice - significado y definición. Qué es Sapphic vice
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Qué (quién) es Sapphic vice - definición

FOUR-LINE STANZA FORM
Sapphic meter; Sapphic Metre; Sapphics; Saphics; Sapphic ode; Sapphicum
  • 470 BCE}}
  • A [[papyrus]] manuscript preserving [[Sappho]]'s "Fragment 5", a poem written in Sapphic stanzas
  • [[Algernon Charles Swinburne]], around the time he published "Sapphics"

Sapphic stanza         
The Sapphic stanza, named after Sappho, is an Aeolic verse form of four lines. Originally composed in quantitative verse and unrhymed, since the Middle Ages imitations of the form typically feature rhyme and accentual prosody.
sapphics         
verse in a metre associated with Sappho.
Vice-county         
  • Map showing detailed differences between Derbyshire vice-county (VC57) and the modern administrative county of [[Derbyshire]], England
  • Irish vice counties
SUBDIVISION OF THE BRITISH ISLES, FOR BIOLOGICAL RECORDING PURPOSES
Vice counties; UK vice counties; Vice counties of the British Isles; Vice counties of Great Britain; Vice counties of the UK; Vice counties of England; Watsonian vice-county system; Watsonian vice county system; Watsonian vice county; Watsonian vice-county; Vice county; Watsonian vice counties; Vice-county recording system; Vice Counties; Watsonian vice-counties; Vice-County; Vice-counties; Cheviotland; Watson-Praeger vice-county; Praeger vice-county; Watson-Praeger vice-counties
A vice-county (vice county or biological vice-county) is a geographical division of the British Isles used for the purposes of biological recording and other scientific data-gathering. It is sometimes called a Watsonian vice-county as vice-counties were introduced for Great Britain, its offshore islands, and the Isle of Man, by Hewett Cottrell Watson who first used them in the third volume of his Cybele Britannica published in 1852.

Wikipedia

Sapphic stanza

The Sapphic stanza, named after Sappho, is an Aeolic verse form of four lines. Originally composed in quantitative verse and unrhymed, since the Middle Ages imitations of the form typically feature rhyme and accentual prosody. It is "the longest lived of the Classical lyric strophes in the West".