beat poetry

  • 11Poetry Slam — Slam Teilnehmer Lasse Samström beim Box Slam, St. Gallen, 2005 …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 12Poetry for the Beat Generation — Infobox Album | Name = Jack Kerouac Type = Album Longtype = (spoken word) Artist = Jack Kerouac Released = 1959 Recorded = 1958 Genre = Spoken Word Length = 40.8 Label = Hanover Producer = Bob Thiele Reviews = * Allmusic Rating|4|5… …

    Wikipedia

  • 13Poetry for the People — ▪ 1999       Anyone who believed in 1998 that American poetry had perished or was clinging to life only among a small group of academics writing inaccessible verse for themselves alone might have been surprised by recent trends. Poetry as an art… …

    Universalium

  • 14beat — beatable, adj. /beet/, v., beat, beaten or beat, beating, n., adj. v.t. 1. to strike violently or forcefully and repeatedly. 2. to dash against: rain beating the trees. 3. to flutter, flap, or rotate in or against: beating the air with its wings …

    Universalium

  • 15Beat (music) — For other uses, see Beat (disambiguation). A Taiwanese taiko drummer The beat is the basic unit of time in music, the pulse of the mensural level[1] (or beat level).[2 …

    Wikipedia

  • 16poetry in the 1970s —    The 1970s mark a point of transition in poetry. In 1974, Philip Larkin published his last collection of poems, High Windows. The poets, mainly men, whose work had been published for twenty or thirty years or even more, continued to be… …

    Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture

  • 17beat — [c]/bit / (say beet) verb (beat, beaten or beat, beating) –verb (t) 1. to strike repeatedly and usually violently. 2. to thrash, cane, or flog, as a punishment. 3. to whisk; stir, as in order to thicken or aerate: to beat cream; to beat eggwhites …

  • 18beat — [[t]bit[/t]] v. beat, beat•en beat, beat•ing 1) to strike forcefully and repeatedly: to beat a toy drum[/ex] 2) cvb to hit (a person or animal) repeatedly so as to cause painful injury; thrash (often fol. by up) 3) to dash against: rain beating… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 19beat — I. verb (beat; beaten or beat; beating) Etymology: Middle English beten, from Old English bēatan; akin to Old High German bōzan to beat Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. to strike repeatedly: a. to hit repeatedly so as to inflict pain… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 20beat — verb (past beat; past participle beaten) 1》 strike (a person or an animal) repeatedly and violently so as to hurt or punish them.     ↘strike repeatedly so as to make a noise.     ↘flatten or shape (metal) by striking it repeatedly with a hammer …

    English new terms dictionary