Answer:
Answer choice (C), yet
Explanation:
On the list of conjunctions, there is and, but, or, yet, etc. But what about the other choices? Well, (A), the word is which is just the word be, but third person, so it is not a conjunction. (B), student, is a noun, not a conjunction. (D), she, is also a noun. And lastly, (E), the word good, is an adjective, not a conjunction. Therefore, it is (C), yet. Hope this helps!
True
In Coleridge's Biographia Literaria, he says that it is legitimate to call any composition composed using rhyme and meter a poem. In the text he says, "If a man chooses to call every composition a poem, which is rhyme, or measure, or both, I must leave his opinion uncontroverted." He goes on to repeat this when he says, "the composition will be a poem, merely because it is distinguished from composition in prose by metre, or by rhyme, or by both conjointly." In both of these he asserts that a poem is a composition with rhyme and meter.
The answer is A, because a play is the written portion and a production is the process of making the play real.
Ballad poems are poems telling a story usually through a song.
narrative poems tell a story using voices of narrators or charectors using metaphored versus