Most religious terms in English are from Anglo-Saxon origin.
True or False:
<u><em>False</em></u>
Most <u>religious terms</u> in English come from <u>Latin origin</u>. These terms were introduced during the <u>Roman Conquest</u> (43-84 AD) through the Romans' main language: Latin. Most of the Celtic and Anglo-Saxon religions that were practiced were slowly suppressed by <u>Christianity</u>. This process was officially achieved in the <u>year 597 </u>in which Augustine of Canterbury was sent by Gregory the Great with the intention of fully evangelizing England's population.
For is the preposition; and the prepositional phrase is: for a kitten with bright eyes.
Answer:
The words are:
- head (Line 2)
- thread (Line 4)
- out (Line 6)
- trout (Line 8)
- aflame (Line 10)
- name (Line 12)
- hair (Line 14)
- air (Line 16)
- lands (Line 18)
- hands (Line 20)
- gone (Line 19)
- done (Line 22)
Explanation:
The above words suggest that Aengus is chanting a song. From the above excerpt, we will discover that all even lines of the poem had last words that ryhme with another.
The rhyming makes the poem songlike. This suggests to the reader that Aengus is chanting a song. Ryhmes tend to give poem a kind of rhythm that makes it somewhat melodious like a song.