Four
8 men lay 100 feet in 2 days.The same 8 men lay 50 feet per day.Each man lays 50/8 feet per day.So 3 men lay 150/8 feet per day.It takes them 8 days to lay 150 feet.
6 feet per second = 360 feet per minute
Five feet per minute equates to 0.083 feet (about 1 inch) per second.
720 feet per minute.
In poetry, a line length of four feet is known as tetrameter. Other line lengths include: One foot: monometer Two feet: dimeter Three feet: trimeter Five feet: pentameter Six Feet: hexameter Seven feet: heptameter Eight feet: octameter
A line with four feet is known as tetrameter in poetry. This refers to having four metrical feet per line. Shakespeare's plays and some poems consist of lines in tetrameter.
Octameter means eight poetic feet.
A tetrameter line has four metric feet per line.
In poetry, a meter refers to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of verse, while a foot is the basic building block of meter, typically consisting of one stressed syllable and one or more unstressed syllables. Meters are categorized by the number of feet in a line (e.g. iambic pentameter has five feet per line), while feet are the individual units that make up these patterns.
Different kinds of feet in classic scansion. Typically there is an indication of the kind of foot in a typical line, along with an indication of the number of those feet per line, as in 'iambic pentameter'.
28 mph = 147,840 feet per hour.
This line is in trochaic tetrameter, as it follows a pattern of stressed-unstressed syllables with four metrical feet per line.
8 feet per second = 480 feet per minute Just multiply eight by sixty because there are sixty seconds in a minute.
Four
Iambic pentameter is a meter in poetry consisting of five metrical feet per line, with each foot following an unstressed-stressed pattern. Blank verse is poetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter, which is commonly used in English literature, such as in the works of Shakespeare.
The basic unit of meter is the foot. A metrical foot usually (though not always) consists of one accented syllable and one or two slack syllables. There are other types of feet, but the feet most commonly used in English poetry are as follows:iamb-- x / . . . . . . . . . (adjective form = iambic)trochee-- / x . . . . . . . . (adjective form = trochaic)anapest-- x x / . . . . . . . (adjective form = anapestic)dactyl-- / x x . . . . . . . . (adjective form = dactylic)pyrrhic-- x x . . . . . . . . (adjective form = pyrrhic)spondee-- / / . . . . . . . . (adjective form = spondaic)The metrical pattern of a poem depends not only on the poem's most commonly used foot, but on the number of feet per line. The following lines (with an approximate pronunciation guide, based on what is possible at this site) are the ones most commonly used in English poetry:dimeter (DIM a ter)--two feet per linetrimeter (TRIM a ter)--three feet per linetetrameter (teh TRAM a ter)--four feet per linepentameter (pen TAM a ter)--five feet per linehexameter (hex AM a ter)--six feet per lineheptameter (hep TAM a ter)--seven feet per lineoctameter (ahk TAM a ter)--eight feet per line