A Sonnet isn't defined in terms of beats. Its characteristic feature is being 14 lines long. There have been different variants of the 14 lines over the ages, but it started with the Petrarchan sonnet in Italy, and the main variants in English have been the Shakespearean and Miltonic sonnets. The Shakespearean sonnet is written in iambic pentameter (that is, each line has five feet in the order of unstressed-stressed syllables, for a total of 10 syllables per line). Perhaps that's what you're thinking of.
A sonnet typically has 14 lines and can be divided into different rhyme schemes such as Petrarchan or Shakespearean. In terms of beats, it is written in iambic pentameter, which means each line generally has 10 syllables with alternating stressed and unstressed beats.
There are two syllables in sonnet.
Sonnet has two syllables, son net
it has 4 stanzas
14 lines.
An Italian Sonnet consists of 14 lines divided into an octet (8 lines) and a sestet (6 lines). The rhyme scheme for an Italian Sonnet is typically ABBAABBA for the octet and either CDCDCD or CDECDE for the sestet.
In a Shakespearean sonnet, there are 3 quatrains
There are always 14 lines in a sonnet.
A sonnet typically consists of 14 lines.
i think its the 'beat' if the sonnet and how many words are in a sonnet. But it isn't. What makes it a Shakespearean sonnet is the rhyme scheme which is ababcdcdefefgg. The 'beat' of all sonnets in English is iambic pentameter, and it doesn't matter how many words there are.
140 beats
3
125 beats
Three beats in a lope.
A traditional English sonnet consists of 14 lines.
A sonnet has fourteen lines. A sonnet is like a poem.
Fourteen