sonnet

noun

son·​net ˈsä-nət How to pronounce sonnet (audio)
Synonyms of sonnetnext
: a fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of 14 lines that are typically 5-foot iambics rhyming according to a prescribed scheme
also : a poem in this pattern

Examples of sonnet in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
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In his sonnets, Shakespeare pairs was with glass, and warmed with disarmed. Literary Hub, 25 June 2026 Tech was even still cool in late 2022 when OpenAI released ChatGPT and everyone started giddily re-doing Taylor Swift lyrics as Shakespearean sonnets. Steven Zeitchik, HollywoodReporter, 25 June 2026 Performance That Relies On Deep Institutional Reasoning Frontier models are extraordinary at problems that are truly novel, ambiguous and wide—writing sonnets, solving math olympiad problems, debugging Python code. Anshul Gupta, Forbes.com, 18 June 2026 My expertise, for example, is in the African American sonnet tradition. Jay Caspian Kang, New Yorker, 12 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for sonnet

Word History

Etymology

Italian sonetto, from Old Occitan sonet little song, from son sound, song, from Latin sonus sound

First Known Use

circa 1555, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of sonnet was circa 1555

Browse Nearby Words

Cite this Entry

“Sonnet.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sonnet. Accessed 3 Jul. 2026.

Kids Definition

sonnet

noun
son·​net ˈsän-ət How to pronounce sonnet (audio)
: a poem of 14 lines usually rhyming by a fixed scheme

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