Enjambment in poetry refers to a line break that occurs in the middle of a grammatical unit, such as a phrase or clause, with the syntactic structure continuing into the next line. It requires the reader or speaker to carry meaning across the line break to resolve the grammatical sense. Enjambment calls for the actor to follow the sense of the sentence rather than the structure of the line.
Enjambment in poetry refers to a line break that occurs in the middle of a grammatical unit, such as a phrase or clause, with the syntactic structure continuing into the next line. It requires the reader or speaker to carry meaning across the line break to resolve the grammatical sense. Enjambment calls for the actor to follow the sense of the sentence rather than the structure of the line.
Enjambment in poetry refers to a line break that occurs in the middle of a grammatical unit, such as a phrase or clause, with the syntactic structure continuing into the next line. It requires the reader or speaker to carry meaning across the line break to resolve the grammatical sense. Enjambment calls for the actor to follow the sense of the sentence rather than the structure of the line.