scazon

Etymology
, from, from.

Noun

 * 1) A limping satiric meter in classical verse.
 * 2) A iambic trimeter ending with a trochee or spondee, a limping iamb.

Etymology
From the, the present active participle of.

Noun

 * 1)  an iambic trimeter, with a spondee or trochee in the last foot
 * 2) * AD 86–103, Marcus Valerius Martialis, Epigrammaton, book I, epigram xcvi, lines 1–3:
 * Si non molestum est teque non piget, scazon, // Nostro rogamus pauca verba Materno // Dicas in aurem sic ut audiat solus.
 * 1) * ibidem, book VII, epigram xxvi, line 1 and 10 (identical):
 * Apollinarem conveni meum, Scazon.
 * 1) * AD 103–107, Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus, Epistulae, book V, letter x: “C. Plinius Suetonio Tranquillo suo s.”, § 2:
 * Sum et ipse in edendo haesitator, tu tamen meam quoque cunctationem tarditatemque vicisti. Proinde aut rumpe iam moras aut cave ne eosdem istos libellos, quos tibi hendecasyllabi nostri blanditiis elicere non possunt, convicio scazontes extorqueant.