In poetry, a foot is a unit of meter that consists of a pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables. It is used to measure and organize the rhythm of a poetic line. Some common types of feet include iambic, trochaic, and dactylic feet.
No, a couplet is a pair of rhymed lines in a poem or verse. A metrical foot is a unit of stressed and unstressed syllables used in metered poetry.
Moving - amperes. Stored - coulombs.
Moving - amperes. Stored - coulombs.
meter
A foot.
A foot (plural: feet or foot;[1] symbol or abbreviation: ft or, sometimes, ′ - the prime symbol) is a non-SI unit of length For example, 2 feet 4 inches is denoted as 2′4″.
No, a foot is not a SI (International System of Units) unit. It is commonly used in the United States and a few other countries as a unit of length, with 1 foot equal to 0.3048 meters.
Inches or centimeters.
The American unit for work is foot-pound. It is a measurement of energy where one foot-pound is the amount of energy used to move a one-pound object a distance of one foot.
You generally count them in moles, which is actually a number: 6.02X1023.
A pentameter is a unit of poetic meter containing five metrical feet. It does not have a fixed length in kilometers, as it is a unit used in poetry to describe the rhythm of a line of verse, not a unit of distance like kilometers.