tribrach

Etymology 1
From the, from the , from. Compare the 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  A metrical foot consisting of three short syllables.
 * 2) * 1589,, The Arte of English Poesie, book ii , chapter xiii (Arb.), page 133:
 * For your foote tribracchus of all three short, ye haue very few trissillables.
 * 1) * 1827, the Rev’d Canon James Tate, An Introduction to the Principal Greek Tragic and Comic Metres in Scansion, Structure, and Ictus (second edition, 1829), chapter xi: “The Ictus of the long Trochaic of Tragedy”, §5 (page 23):
 * Of all the resolved feet, the Tribrach in Trochaic verse with its ictus on the first syllable ⏑́⏑⏑ is most readily recognised by the ear as equivalent to the Trochee.
 * 1) * 1827, the Rev’d Canon James Tate, An Introduction to the Principal Greek Tragic and Comic Metres in Scansion, Structure, and Ictus (second edition, 1829), chapter xi: “The Ictus of the long Trochaic of Tragedy”, §5 (page 23):
 * Of all the resolved feet, the Tribrach in Trochaic verse with its ictus on the first syllable ⏑́⏑⏑ is most readily recognised by the ear as equivalent to the Trochee.

Translations

 * French:
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: τρῐ́βρᾰχῠς
 * Latin: tribrachys

Noun

 * 1) A figure  object having three arms  branches.
 * 2)  A tribrachial prehistoric flint implement.
 * A circular platform on three legs, each having levelling screws, used to connect a to a.
 * A circular platform on three legs, each having levelling screws, used to connect a to a.
 * A circular platform on three legs, each having levelling screws, used to connect a to a.

Translations

 * Swedish: trefot