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juin [17]
4 years ago
11

Describe the parts of a poem and include an example for line and verse stanza lime

English
2 answers:
Anna71 [15]4 years ago
7 0
There are a lot of parts to a poem. I'm just going to tell you everything basically.
1. A verse, its usually means a line of poetry, for example in the 'Dust of Snow' by Robert Frost "A change of mood" is a verse.
2. Next comes stanza, a stanza in a poem is like a paragraph in an essay. Each stanza is usually separated by some blank space. ( For an example look up Snevington Snee by Jack Prelutsky).
3. I bet you know what a rhyme is,but just in case it is a repetition of end sounds.
4. I dont think you'll be learning about rhyme scheme yet but it can be determine by making the same rhyming lines of the poem with a letter of the alphabet. An example would look like "Grizelda Gratz kept 60 cats (A)
She fed them very well (B) ON angel cakes and raisin flakes (C) And acorns in a shell (B).
5. Lastly a line in a poem is a single line or word in a poem, like "A young girl was bust working on her project for school".
larisa86 [58]4 years ago
6 0
I don't really get your question, but ill try and help...
Poems can be either rhyme or it can also be a free stanza...

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Can u please help me and fin grammmar mistakes??
Artist 52 [7]

Answer:

Explanation:

I am not sure how to help you put them into the chart, but I can point them out

The error of highly in Line 3 should be high

The error of trusting in Line 4 should be trust

The error of "hovering, helicopter parent" Line 5 should be "hovering helicopter parent". Remove the comma or add "a" in-front of helicopter parent. I am sure either of the two corrections will be fine

The error of making in Line 7 should be makes. In the same line builds should be building. This is optional and I am not sure how it will work out, but you can change experience to experiences.

The error in the last line take out one.

You can read through the optional corrections to see how it works to your liking.

4 0
4 years ago
What are 3 to 4 themes for the short story "Just Lather, That’s All?"
Anna007 [38]

Answer:

The overriding theme of "Just Lather, That's All" is that man is ultimately responsible for his own actions. Although we might often think that we're nothing more than the plaything of irresistible forces beyond our control, in actual fact, we are very much the authors of our own destiny, exercising moral choices at every stage of our lives.

This point is perfectly illustrated by the character of the barber in the story. He may have found himself in a difficult situation, yet he still has the ability to determine his own future. He can cut Captain Torres's throat, which, though it would remove an evil, violent man from the world, would constitute a clear act of murder. Or, he can refrain from killing Torres, a decision he might come to regret in due course.

Either way, the choice is the barber's, and no one else's. Like everyone else in the world, he has to make his own moral choices; no one else can make them for him. When it comes to making such choices, we are effectively all alone in the world. And whatever choices we eventually make, we ultimately have to live with the consequences, as is the case with the barber.

"Just Lather, That's All" presents an existentialist drama of the type explored at length in the plays of Henrik Ibsen compressed into a few pages. The barber has the chance to become a revolutionary hero by killing Captain Torres. He wrestles with his conscience over this opportunity, then decides not to take it. The Captain's final remark, though it provides a neat twist with which to end the story, does not alter any essential aspect of the barber's decision, though it does throw into sharp relief the two very different types of men with whom the story deals.

Captain Torres is a hero and a villain. The barber recognizes that to be a hero to one side is to be a villain to the other. He knows that if he slits Torres's throat while shaving him, he will be denounced as a coward by some, while others would praise him as "The avenger of us all. A name to remember."

In the end, he decides that he will not be a hero or a villain, but a simple barber, who did his work honestly when a man came to him for a shave. The theme of the story is the barber's struggle with his own identity and his final choice of the type of man he wants to be. Though he is not a hero of the revolution, the reader may find some heroism in the simple, honest values by which the barber chooses to define himself.

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
How do tributaries compare in size with the body of water they flow into
dmitriy555 [2]
Whatever they saiddddddddddd
4 0
3 years ago
Instead of asking the Hales for money, Ethan: (ethan frome)
Virty [35]

Answer:

Instead of asking the Hales for money, Ethan Frome turns back and returns home, setting aside the plans to run away with Mattie.

Explanation:

Edith Wharton's novel "Ethan Frome," tells the story of Ethan Frome and his struggle with his sick wife Zeena and his love for Mattie, his wife's cousin. Struggling to maintain what life is for him, the story delves into the concepts of what society expects of a person despite it being contrary to what one really wants.

Ethan wanted to run away with Mattie for he loves her. And so, deciding to ask for an advance to the Hales for the lumber, he went out to intercept Andrew Hale's wagon only to find Mrs. Hale. She told him that her husband is at home so Ethan went in that direction. His plan was to leave the farm and mill for Zeena and acquire the money for his and Mattie's life. But while walking towards the Hales' residence, his conscience took the better part of him. And so, instead of asking the Hales for money, he turned back and walked towards home without the money.  

7 0
3 years ago
I don’t understand. Can someone help me please
Vlada [557]

I believe this is a clause because it has a subject and a predicate

the predicate being: Inspirational leader

the subject being: Mohandas gandhi

sorry if im wrong i tried

here is the difference between a phrase and clause that i googled sice i didn't really know how to explain it

On the other extreme, the clause is a part of a sentence, that contains a subject (noun phrase) that actively performs an action (finite verb form). A phrase is a part of a clause or a sentence. As against, a clause is a sentence fragment. A clause has a subject and predicate, whereas a phrase doesn't.

I hope this helps x3

7 0
4 years ago
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