MASNAWI


Meaning of MASNAWI in English

also spelled masnavi or mathnavi a series of distichs (couplets) in rhymed pairs (aa, bb, cc, and so on) that makes up a characteristic type of Persian verse, used chiefly for heroic, historical, and romantic epic poetry and didactic poetry. The form originated in the Middle Persian period (roughly from the 3rd century BC to the 9th century AD). It became a favourite poetic form of the Persians and of those cultures they influenced. The masnawi enabled the poet to develop the thread of a tale through thousands of verses. Yet even in such poetry only a restricted number of metres was employed, and no metre allowed more than 11 syllables in a hemistich (half-line). Metre and diction were prescribed in accordance with the topic. A didactic masnawi required a style and metre different from a heroic or a romantic one. Most masnawis, however, begin with a praise of God, and this strikes the keynote of the poem. Epic poetry was unknown to the Arabs, who were averse to fiction whether expressed in poetry or in prose. Eventually, however, the masnawi took root in Arabic literature, where it bore the Arabic name muzdawij. The term masnawi is from the Persian masnavi (also spelled mathnawi), which is probably a derivative of the Arabic mathna, meaning two by two.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.