, Use only in @met for stanzas where a conventional metre name is not available and the metre has a different template for odd and even lines

, It appears from Velankar (1949: ???) that no two traditional authorities agree on a name for this metre, The names cited there from treaties on poetics are: u??ih (which is also the class name for 7-syllable samavr? ttas), k?min?, khe?aka, gomin?, rakt?, ?ikh? and sam?nik?, 1952.

, Also known as ?loka, vaktra. See also the Notes on anu??ubh on page 136 below

, If a verse matches this template, do not classify it as vait?l?ya

, Used as an umbrella term for 11-syllable metres not conforming to one of the specific schemes listed here

. =-?-?-?-?-?-?--|-?-?-?-?-?-?, , vol.14, p.69

, If a verse matches this template, do not classify it as aupacchandasika

, Used as an umbrella term for 12-syllable metres not conforming to one of the specific schemes listed here

, Also known as jagat? upaj?ti

, Also known as va??asthavila

, Ab1"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>In a hole in the ground <milestone unit="face" n="b"/>there lived <lb n="Ab2"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, <milestone unit="face" n="b"/>wet hole, <lb n="Ab3"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>filled with the ends of <milestone unit="face" n="b"/>worms and <lb n="Ab4"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>an oozy smell, nor yet a <milestone unit="face" n="b"/>dry, bare, <lb n="Ab5"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>sandy hole with nothing <milestone unit="face" n="b"/>in it to <lb n="Ab6"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>sit down on or to eat: <milestone unit="face" n="b"/>it was a <lb n="Ab7"/><milestone unit="face" n="A"/>hobbit-hole, and that <milestone unit=, Also known as vasantatilaka, uddhar?i??, si?honnat?. Though not explicitly prescribed in any extant metrical treatise, poets <p><!--All milestones come within paragraphs.--> <milestone type="pagelike" unit="faces" n="Ab"/><!--An optional <label> could have been added at this point and for the second facepair, as per §3.5.4. --> <lb n=

. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;, > <p>It had a perfectly <milestone unit="face" n="d"/>round door <lb n="Cd2"/><milestone unit="face" n="C"/>like a porthole, painted <milestone unit="face" n="d"/>green, with <lb n="Cd3"/><milestone unit="face" n="C"/>a shiny yellow brass knob <milestone unit="face" n="d"/>in the exact <lb n="Cd4"/><milestone unit="face" n="C"/>middle. The door opened <milestone unit="face" n="d"/>on to a <lb n="Cd5"/><milestone unit="face" n="C"/>tube-shaped hall like a <milestone unit=, The text has been broken up into two semantic paragraphs §2.2.1 for the sake of this illustration

&. N=,

&. ,

V. Apte and . Shivaram, Apte's The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary, 1957.

E. Arnold and . Vernon, Vedic Metre in Its Historical Development, 1905.

D. J. Birnbaum, What is XML and why should humanists care? An even gentler introduction to XML, 2015.

G. Bodard, EpiDoc: Epigraphic Documents in XML for Publication and Interchange, Latin on Stone: Epigraphic Research and Electronic Archives, pp.101-119, 2010.

H. Colebrooke and . Thomas, 1873. Miscellaneous Essays, vol.3

L. Damais, Études d'épigraphie indonésienne, III: liste des principales inscriptions datées de l'Indonésie'. Bulletin de l'École française d'Extrême-Orient, vol.46, pp.1-105, 1952.

J. Fleet and . Faithfull, Inscriptions of the Early Gupta Kings and Their Successors. Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum, III. Calcutta: Superintendent of Government Printing, 1888.

S. Pollock and . Ivan, Aspects of Versification in Sanskrit Lyric Poetry. American Oriental Society. Roueché, Charlotte and Julia Flanders. The Gentle Introduction to Mark-up for Epigraphers, 1977.

H. Velankar and . Damodar, Jayad?man A Collection of Ancient Texts on Sanskrit Prosody and a Classified List of Sanskrit Metres with an Alphabetical Index, Harito?am?l?, vol.1, 1949.