Other crossword clues for answer "HAIKU"
- HAIKU
- Poetry form
- Japanese verse
- Type of poem this clue is four syllables short of
- Work with 17 syllables
- I tried writing a / poem as an example / of this answer here
- Japanese verse form
- Basho specialty
- Poem of 17 syllables
- Succinct verse form
- Three-line opus
- Evocative verse
- Japanese poem
- Succinct verse
- Tanka's shorter cousin
- Basho composition
- Three-phrase poem
- Verse often inspired by nature
- Work of nature, traditionally
- Traditionally, they were works of nature
- Verse with 17 syllables
- Poem with 17 syllables
- What "Now the swinging bridge/Is quieted with creepers/Like our tendrilled life" is an example of
- 17-syllable verse
- Three-line Japanese verse
- Brief poetry
- Terse verse
- Three lines, perhaps
- 3-line poem
- 17-syllable poem
- A poem like this / Of 17 syllables / Split 5-7-5
- Poetic form inspired by nature
- 17-syllable verse form
- Type of poem
- Three-line poem
- Japanese art form / whose ilk is exemplified / (not well) by this clue
- Short Japanese verse
- Japanese unrhymed verse
- Unrhymed Japanese poem
- Japanese poetry form
- Kyoshi's poetry
- Japanese three-line verse
- Three-line verse
- Narrowly defined poem
- Basho's forte
- Narrowly defined verse
- 17-syllable work
- Verse often about nature
- Three-line Japanese poem
- Japanese poem with 17 syllables
- Japanese 17-syllable poem
- Specifically designed poem
- 17-syllable Japanese poem
- Very short poem
- Short verse
- Short poem
- Japanese terse verse
- Short Japanese poem
- Japanese poetic form
- Senryu's cousin
- Short poem about nature
- Oriental poem
- Form of Japanese poetry
- Poetic genre of Matsuo Basho
- Matsuo Basho work
- Eastern verse
- Epigrammatic verse
- Three-line work
- Evocative three-line verse
- One-stanza poem
- Poem with exactly 17 syllables
- An old silent pond / A frog jumps into the pond / Splash! Silence again, e.g.
- Exercise in brevity
- Traditional three-liner
- 5-7-5 verse
- Poem like "The swallow flies up / Into a blue evening sky, / Summer's small herald"
- Poem name whose singular and plural forms are the same
- Writing form even more constrained than a tweet
- The west wind whispered, / And touched the eyelids of spring: / Her eyes, Primroses, for a classic example
- Bit of poetry with the same syllable count as this very clue
- What Richard Wright wrote could be the first line of one
- Poetic form similar to tanka
- Poetic form with kireji
- A kind of poem / Found within this crossword clue / Serendipity
- Work of Matsuo Basho or Masaoka Shiki
- One may be written / Just like this clue is written / But a lot better
- Poem read in a Zen garden, perhaps
- Poem where "I eat oreos" could be the first line
- It's traditionally about nature
- Type of poem with seventeen syllables
- Poetic form for Matsuo Basho
- Unrhymed poem
- Japanese poetry
- Seventeen-syllable creation
- 17-syllable form of poetry
- A poem like this clue / Although perhaps not quite as / Abominable
- Seventeen-syllable poem
- Seventeen-syllable verse
- Seventeen-syllable work
- Poem with 17 morae
- 5/7/5 poem
- Kobayashi Issa poem
- Poetic form used by Basho
- Poem with a seasonal reference
- Its middle line is heptasyllabic
- Basho poem
- 17-syllable creation
- It traditionally captures the essence of the moment
- A poetry form/With seventeen syllables/And only three lines
- Basho work
- Japanese lines
- Quick-to-read poem
- Literary work/with a format that's concise/first penned in Japan