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Synonyms

verse

1 American  
[vurs] / vɜrs /

noun

  1. (not in technical use) a stanza.

  2. a succession of metrical feet written, printed, or orally composed as one line; one of the lines of a poem.

  3. a particular type of metrical line.

    a hexameter verse.

  4. a poem, or piece of poetry.

  5. metrical composition; poetry, especially as involving metrical form.

  6. metrical writing distinguished from poetry because of its inferior quality.

    a writer of verse, not poetry.

  7. a particular type of metrical composition.

    elegiac verse.

  8. the collective poetry of an author, period, nation, etc..

    Miltonian verse;

    American verse.

  9. one of the short conventional divisions of a chapter of the Bible.

  10. Music.

    1. that part of a song following the introduction and preceding the chorus.

    2. a part of a song designed to be sung by a solo voice.

  11. Rare. a line of prose, especially a sentence, or part of a sentence, written as one line.

  12. Rare. a subdivision in any literary work.


adjective

  1. of, relating to, or written in verse.

    a verse play.

verb (used without object)

versed, versing
  1. versify.

verb (used with object)

versed, versing
  1. to express in verse.

verse 2 American  
[vurs] / vɜrs /

verb (used with object)

  1. Slang. to play against; be the opponent of, as in a game or match.

    Want to verse me in this new RPG?

    We lost against the Wildcats when we versed them a couple of days ago.


-verse 3 American  
  1. a combining form extracted from universe, occurring as the final element in compounds with the sense “in the sphere or realm of”: Chaos is erupting in the Twitterverse right now. We try to stick with using the Linuxverse on our computers. A new publisher is big news in the writerverse.

  2. a combining form extracted from universe, used in forming names for a fictional world associated with a particular media franchise: the BTTF-verse of Back to the Future;

    the Whoniverse of Doctor Who;

    the BTTF-verse of Back to the Future;

    the Vorkosiverse of the Vorkosigan Saga.


verse British  
/ vɜːs /

noun

  1. (not in technical usage) a stanza or other short subdivision of a poem

  2. poetry as distinct from prose

    1. a series of metrical feet forming a rhythmic unit of one line

    2. ( as modifier )

      verse line

  3. a specified type of metre or metrical structure

    iambic verse

  4. one of the series of short subsections into which most of the writings in the Bible are divided

  5. a metrical composition; poem

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. a rare word for versify

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
verse Cultural  
  1. A kind of language made intentionally different from ordinary speech or prose. It usually employs devices such as meter and rhyme, though not always. Free verse, for example, has neither meter nor rhyme. Verse is usually considered a broader category than poetry, with the latter being reserved to mean verse that is serious and genuinely artistic.


verse Idioms  

Related Words

Verse, stanza, strophe, stave are terms for a metrical grouping in poetic composition. Verse is often mistakenly used for stanza, but is properly only a single metrical line. A stanza is a succession of lines (verses) commonly bound together by a rhyme scheme, and usually forming one of a series of similar groups that constitute a poem: The four-line stanza is the one most frequently used in English. Strophe (originally the section of a Greek choral ode sung while the chorus was moving from right to left) is in English poetry practically equivalent to “section”; a strophe may be unrhymed or without strict form, but may be a stanza: Strophes are divisions of odes. Stave is a word (now seldom used) that means a stanza set to music or intended to be sung: a stave of a hymn; a stave of a drinking song. See poetry.

Other Word Forms

  • underverse noun

Etymology

Origin of verse1

First recorded before 900; Middle English vers(e), fers “line of poetry, section of a psalm,” from Old French vers, Anglo-French verse, veers, and Old English fers, færs, fyrs, from Latin versus “a row, line (of poetry),” literally, “a turning,” equivalent to vert(ere), “to turn” (past participle versus; akin to -ward, worth 2

Origin of verse2

An Americanism dating back to 1980–85; shortening of versus ( def. )

Origin of -verse3

First recorded in 1980–85

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The verses would be passable if not for the unremarkable “day in the life” lyrics.

From Salon

He studied and wrote poetry in detention, penning his verses on cigarette boxes when he couldn't access paper.

From Barron's

But he turns up the volume on his rich voice so high, and so consistently, that Shakespeare’s verse comes across like the sound of a jackhammer without an off switch.

From The Wall Street Journal

The gravity of the task may help me hold my tongue as the verse commands.

From Literature

And then everybody got the idea, and it became a sort of song with a verse of “Please, Ms. Washington” and a chorus of “Please, please, please.”

From Literature