Answer:
"Your Little Voice" uses imagery in the lines "over time//and tide and death//leaping", conveying the sadness of the death through comparing the voice to the movement of wind and waves. "Grandma Ling" uses imagery in the lines: "to take to heart the eldest daughter//of her youngest son a quarter century away", by comparing the distance in time and geography as well as in cultural differences, to express the emotional distance between families far apart.
Answer: Here's 8 example's of poetry.
1. Blank verse. Blank verse is poetry written with a precise meter—almost always iambic pentameter—that does not rhyme. ...
2. Rhymed poetry.
3. Free verse.
4. Epics.
5. Narrative poetry.
6. Haiku
7. Pastoral poetry
8. Sonnet
Explanation:
Brainlist plz??
Answer:
a teacher will look at you with a weird look. or they could stop class. they could come near you and watch over your shoulder. or your teacher could be a maniac and start yelling all retarted
Explanation:
Answer:
you could use " My friend said she was thirsty so I poured her a cup of water.
Explanation:
I did this as my answer and it was right.
hope this helps
<span>Dramatic Narrative: Ballads usually tell a
story, focusing on one dramatic event, and the story is usually told in
plain, everyday language. Casey definitely has these requirements
covered. The poem has a cast of characters and a story with a clear
beginning, middle, and end. And "Casey…" doesn't send you running for
the dictionary every other line.</span><span>Song: Ballads were traditionally stories meant to be sung. The poem's epigraph, "Sung in the Year 1888 [our emphasis]," along with the poem's strong meter and rhyme, indicate a song-i-ness that fulfills this requirement quite nicely.</span>Meter-Line-Stanza: Ballads are traditionally in iambic lines. Iambs
are those little, two-syllable units that follow an unstressed-stressed
syllable patten. They make that daDUM sound that seems to pop up so
often in poetry. You can really hear those iambs right from the poem's
very first line:
The
outlook
wasn't
brilliant
for the
Mudville
nine that
day<span>
.</span>
Did you hear that daDUM daDUM daDUM pattern? That, is the rhythm of the iambs—seven in all in this line.
In
addition to those iambs, ballad lines follow a strict rhyme scheme and
are grouped into four-line stanzas called quatrains. In "Casey at the
Bat," the quatrains follow an AABB rhyme scheme, where each letter
represents that line's end rhyme. Take a look at the end words from
stanza one to see it in action:
day A
play A
same B
game B
<span><span>
[Poem structure - stanzas. In prose, ideas are usually grouped together in paragraphs. In poems, lines are often grouped together into what are called stanzas. Like paragraphs, stanzas are often used to organize ideas.</span>]
</span>