| STANZA | Group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem (6) |
| YLEM | Primordial matter forming the basic elements (4) |
| ICTUS | Recurring metrical beat |
| DACTYL | Metrical unit of verse of three syllables - one long followed by two short (like the parts of a finger) (6) |
| IAMBUS | Metrical unit of two syllables (6) |
| VERSE | Group of lines that form a unit in a poem or song (5) |
| DIPODY | Metrical unit of two feet |
| LITRES | Metrical units of capacity (6) |
| INFOUR | UFO bookfair's line forming 13Ac subtitle (1,4,2,4,5) |
| REFRAIN | This term refers to a phrase, line, or group of lines repeated at intervals throughout a poem, generally at the end of a poem's stanza. |
| GRID | A network of intersecting lines forming a pattern of squares, observed in everyday things such as a crossword puzzle, map, piece of graph paper, spreadsheet or trellis (4) |
| FOET | In prosody, what is a group of syllables constituting a metrical unit of verse? (4) |
| FOOT | A group of syllables forming a metrical unit (4) |
| STANZAS | Arrangements of lines forming poem divisions |
| STROPHE | Some apostrophes found in group of lines in lyric poem (7) |
| IAMB | Metrical unit, in odes |
| SEMIPED | In prosody, a metrical unit equal to half a foot (7) |
| PERM | Informally, a group of lines on a pools coupon which are strictly combinations |
| IAMBS | Metrical units in poetry |
| RAILS | Steel lines forming train tracks, which one is said to have "gone off" when out of control; batons on which to hang pictures above dados; or, secretive birds in an order that includes the coots and fl |