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- Common_metre abstract "Common metre or common measure — abbreviated as C. M. or CM — is a poetic metre consisting of four lines which alternate between iambic tetrameter (four metrical feet per line, with each foot consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable) and iambic trimeter (three metrical feet per line, with each foot consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable), rhyming in the pattern a-b-a-b. The metre is denoted by the syllable count of each line, i.e. 8.6.8.6, 86.86, or 86 86, depending on style, or by its shorthand abbreviation \"CM\". It has historically been used for ballads such as \"Tam Lin\", and hymns such as \"Amazing Grace\" and the Christmas carol \"O Little Town of Bethlehem\". The upshot of this commonality is that lyrics of one song can be sung to the tune of another; for example, \"Advance Australia Fair\", the national anthem of Australia, can be sung to the tune of \"House of the Rising Sun\".".
- Common_metre wikiPageID "1438684".
- Common_metre wikiPageLength "6788".
- Common_metre wikiPageOutDegree "52".
- Common_metre wikiPageRevisionID "697332082".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Advance_Australia_Fair.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Amazing_Grace.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink America_the_Beautiful.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Anapaest.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Ballad.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Because_I_could_not_stop_for_Death.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Caesura.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Casey_at_the_Bat.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Poetic_rhythm.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Christmas_carol.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Couplet.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Emily_Dickinson.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Foot_(prosody).
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Fourteener_(poetry).
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink George_Gascoigne.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Gilligans_Island.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Hymn.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Hymn_tune.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Hymnology.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Iamb_(poetry).
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Iambic_trimeter.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink It_Came_Upon_the_Midnight_Clear.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink John_Newton.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Katharine_Lee_Bates.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Long_metre.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Meter_(hymn).
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Metre_(poetry).
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink National_anthem.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink O_Little_Town_of_Bethlehem.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink One_Song_to_the_Tune_of_Another.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Pokémon.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Spondee.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Tam_Lin.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Tetrameter.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink The_House_of_the_Rising_Sun.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink Trimeter.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLink William_Wordsworth.
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ballad Meter".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "CM".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "Common metre".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "ballad meter".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "ballad metre".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "common metre".
- Common_metre wikiPageWikiLinkText "metre".
- Common_metre wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Anchor.
- Common_metre wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Common_metre subject Category:Poetic_rhythm.
- Common_metre hypernym Metre.
- Common_metre type Building.
- Common_metre type Redirect.
- Common_metre type Concept.
- Common_metre comment "Common metre or common measure — abbreviated as C. M. or CM — is a poetic metre consisting of four lines which alternate between iambic tetrameter (four metrical feet per line, with each foot consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable) and iambic trimeter (three metrical feet per line, with each foot consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable), rhyming in the pattern a-b-a-b. The metre is denoted by the syllable count of each line, i.e.".
- Common_metre label "Common metre".
- Common_metre sameAs Q5153569.
- Common_metre sameAs Common_measure.
- Common_metre sameAs 普通律.
- Common_metre sameAs m.051m4g.
- Common_metre sameAs Ballad_(versmått).
- Common_metre sameAs Q5153569.
- Common_metre wasDerivedFrom Common_metre?oldid=697332082.
- Common_metre isPrimaryTopicOf Common_metre.