Answer:
Explanation:
Where did the sky come from?
Why do ducks quack and not tweet?
Where did animals come from?
Were the islands actually brought up by mauis hook?
Were there ever monsters other than dinos on the earth?
Where did the first pine tree come from?
Did humans evolve from bears or monkeys?
Where did humans originate?
Answer:
The rhyme scheme is ABCB.
In relation to the metric, the poem follows the following pattern:
3 first verses: iambic tetrameter (the verses vary between 8 and 9 syllables)
Last verse: iambic dimeter or iambic trimeter (verses vary between 4 and 5 syllables)
Explanation:
The poem is a literary ballad, inspired by the folk ballads of medieval times. It is possible to observe several characteristics typical of a ballad, as the centralization in a single event (the story of the lady reported by the knight), presentation of the story through a dialogue (in the first three stanzas, the unknown narrator is talking to the knight, and the rest of the poem is the knight's response), use of few figures of language as metaphors and metonymy, and creation of an atmosphere (at the beginning of the poem, the narrator describes the nature as dead), and little information about the characters.
In order to practice them one by one
Mark wrote a Hellenistic gospel, primarily for an audience of gentile Greek-speaking residents of the Roman Empire. Jewish traditions are explained, clearly for the benefit of non-Jews. Aramaic words and phrases are also expanded upon. <span>Alongside these Hellenistic influences, Mark makes use of the Old Testament in the form in which it had been translated into Greek.</span>