There is no under lined word but if say witch one it is i can answer it ohh and plz give brainlyest the only reason i am answering this instead of asking for details is because i am doing missson and i have to answer 25 question in 2 days and i will get 400 points and this is the last question
Answer:
The friend
Explanation:
I took the quiz and I got the answer correct
A organism with more than one cell. Animals, plants, and most fungi fall in this category.
I want to say
six
but i am not certain but i heavily feel like it is six
Foot
Definition:
No toes, no shoes, no soles. In literary circles, this term refers to the most basic unit of a poem's meter.
A foot is a combination of stressed and unstressed syllables. There are all kinds of feet in poetry, and they all sound different, so we'll give you a handy list. If you want to be the nerdiest nerd in the nerd herd, you should memorize it:
<span><span>Iamb: daDUM</span><span>Trochee: DUMda</span><span>Spondee: DUMDUM</span><span>Anapest: dadaDUM</span><span>Dactyl: DUMdada</span><span>Amphibrach: daDUMda</span><span>Pyrrhic: dada</span></span>
A combination of feet makes up a line of meter. So, for example, the most common meter in English poetry is iambic pentameter, which contains five (that's where that "pent-" comes from) iambs, all in a row.
Finding your feet can be as tricky as learning the Viennese waltz, but that's the main task of scansion, a fancy term for analyzing a poem's meter. Just remember the list above, and read aloud, read read aloud.