noun
- Plural of choliamb; a metrical line in classical poetry, typically iambic verse with a spondee or trochee substituted in the final foot, creating a limping or halting effect.
Usage: literary; classical prosody; also called scazon
Examples
- The poet employed choliambs to convey a sense of unease in the final lines of the poem.
- Ancient Greek dramatists used choliambs for comic or satirical effect.
- The metrical analysis revealed several choliambs scattered throughout the text.
- Choliambs create a deliberately awkward rhythm that disrupts the expected iambic pattern.
- Scholars debate the precise function of choliambs in Hipponax's surviving fragments.