Pesquise entre vários professores de Inglês...
Lucy
Lyrics, words, lines, or line can all mean lyrics, so I would like to know, when they all represent lyrics, what is the difference? Thank you very much!
7 de mar de 2024 04:51
Respostas · 3
For poems, songs or poems (created with concentrated poetic intent) the terms have these meanings:
"Lyrics" = the entire composition. It is most often used in musical contexts. However, many poets think of their creations as songs, so even in the absence of music you can use "lyrics" for poems or excerpts from books or plays that feel musical to you.
"Line" = one literal line. In modern terminology, a "line" contains no carriage returns. However, any short excerpt (maybe 2 or 3 lines) can also be thought of as a "line" so long as it contains one coherent thought.
"Word" has the dictionary meaning. The previous sentence contains five words. In a discussion of poetry you don't really need "word" other than to talk about details. For example, you might say "these two words rhyme". When you search for a poem, use the word "poem". For example, rather than say "I am looking for the words of Longfellow's poem about daffodils", just say "I am looking for Longfellow's poem about daffodils".
7 de março de 2024
In US English LYRICS or WORDS refer to the words of a song. LINES refers to the words of a play, movie, TV show, etc.
7 de março de 2024
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Lucy
Habilidades linguísticas
Chinês (Mandarim), Inglês, Francês
Idioma de aprendizado
Inglês
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