Reading and writing haiku offers a way to train the intuitive mind.
Example 46 is a haiku, in which we should not be surprised to find usages which stand counter to typical semantic prosodies.
Making a four-minute speech is a fine art form; a parliamentary version of a haiku.
On the next day, there are a tea dedication ceremony and a haiku dedication ceremony.
Shiki is widely considered to be the most important figure in the modernization of both haiku and tanka poetry.
This poetic diary is in the form known as "haibun", a combination of prose and haiku.
Haiku consists of three lines: the first and third lines each have five "morae" (the rough phonological equivalent of syllables), while the second has seven.
The single-line haiku usually contains much fewer than seventeen syllables.