Obviously, the third option C.Settings are determined by the actors in the play <span>is not a true statement about setting in dramatic plays. I bet you have never seen the actor that could decide how to organize the play or scene at all. Setting is the main point that influences on the audience making it maximally feel the play. Also setting is the place where action is occurring, so it definitely can change from one to another in order to make the play alive. Hope it is clear.</span>
Answer:
O c. Its stanzas have four lines, except at the end.
Explanation:
Sonnets are lyrical poems written as a love note or in appreciation of a lover, mostly women. A Shakespearean Sonnet is a form of a sonnet that was based on the pattern of Shakespeare's style.
Sonnets are written mostly in fourteen lines, where the themes may vary from love, beauty, jealousy and most of all, appreciation of the lover. In this type of sonnet, the lines are written in iambic pentameter where the rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG. The <u>poem contains three quatrains, meaning a four-lined stanza three times followed by a couplet, that is, a stanza with two lines ending the sonnet.
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"no longer required to engage in deeds whose gravity exceeds the demands of their tender years."
direct quote from his speech, hope it helps
"Be not her maid, since she is envious." -> Don't serve her; she's jealous.
"That which we call a rose / By any other name would smell as sweet." -> Names are just labels; they don't mean anything.
"O! that I were a glove upon that hand, / That I might touch that cheek." -> I wish I could touch her face.
"Her eye discourses; I will answer it." -> She speaks with her eyes.