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dactyl
1[ dak-til ]
noun
- Prosody. a foot of three syllables, one long followed by two short in quantitative meter, or one stressed followed by two unstressed in accentual meter, as in gently and humanly. :
- a finger or toe.
Dactyl
2[ dak-til ]
noun
- any of a number of beings dwelling on Mount Ida and working as metalworkers and magicians.
-dactyl
3- variant of -dactylous, especially with nouns:
pterodactyl.
dactyl
/ ˈdæktɪl /
noun
- Also calleddactylic prosody a metrical foot of three syllables, one long followed by two short ( ) Compare bacchius
- zoology any digit of a vertebrate
Word History and Origins
Origin of dactyl1
Word History and Origins
Origin of dactyl1
Example Sentences
The control algorithm, Dactyl, needed some 100 years’ worth of experience in a simulation powered by 6,144 CPUs and 8 Nvidia V100 GPUs to accomplish this relatively simple task.
A Dactyl is a three-syllable foot accented on the first syllable.
It will be noted that the dactyl is very closely related in expression to the trochee, and the anapest to the iambic.
The proceleusmatic foot, or four short syllables, instead of the dactyl; scen.
This foot, consisting of one accented syllable, followed by two unaccented syllables, is called a dactyl.
The Dactyl, a foot of three syllables, the first long and the two last short, is used principally in the first place in the line.
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