- IAMBS
- Shakespeare's feet
- Common pentameter components
- Metric measures
- Poetic units
- Metrical feet
- Poet's feet
- Rhythmic feet
- Feet that go along with the beat
- Starts of most limericks
- Shakespearean feet
- Sonneteer's feet
- Feet of a poet
- Prosodic feet
- Metric feet
- Keatsian feet
- Feet with rhythm?
- Frost-y feet
- Feet in meter
- Some two-syllable feet
- Poetic feet
- Metrical units
- Poetry feet
- Pentameter bits
- Feet of poetry
- Come live with me and be my love has four of them
- Feet on the desk, maybe
- Sonnet line fivesome
- Quartet in "Whose woods these are I think I know"
- Feet in a meter?
- Shakespeare's plays are full of them
- Trio in "To be, or not to be"
- Sonnet line quintet
- Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? quintet
- My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun quintet
- Poetic feet in Shakespeare
- Frost feet
- Poet's "da-DA, da-DA"
- Metrical feet of two syllables.
- Two-syllable feet, in verse.
- Verse cadences
- Feet for W. S. Gilbert
- Feet of common measure
- Blank-verse feet
- Whittier's feet
- Ogden Nash's feet
- Pentameter parts
- Pentameter parts, maybe
- Feet, of sorts
- Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? has five of these
- da-DUM, da-DUM, da-DUM
- Above and "beyond," e.g.
- Two-syllable feet
- Feet, in verse
- Some feet
- Perfume and "cologne," poetically
- Units for Marilyn Nelson or Natasha Trethewey
- Some poetic feet
- This clue contains a whole quintet of them
- Frost's feet?
- Feet in some meters
- Feet, as measured in poetry
- Metrical measures
- Sonnet segments
- Feet found in English verse
- Two-syllable metric feet
- Two-beat feet
- Feet in odes